Silavanta Sutta - Mahasi Sayadaw
Silavanta Sutta - Mahasi Sayadaw
Silavanta Sutta - Mahasi Sayadaw
Mahasi Sayadaw
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Preface
SĪLAVANTA SUTTA
OR
FOREWORD
The reason being that in this Sutta, it has been fully and precisely preached
that an ordinary worldling accomplished with the virtues of morality will
undoubtedly become a Sotāpanna, if he contemplates with earnest devotion
the nature of Upādānakkhandhā and truly realizes them as sAnicca
(impermanence), Dukkha (suffering), and Anatta (Not-Self). In the same
manner, if a Sotāpanna (Stream-Winner) proceeds with the practice of
insight meditation diligently, realization of the truth of the dhamma will be
achieved which will elevate him onto the stage of Sagādāgāmi. The Once-
Returner (Sagādāgāmi) will again move up to the next stage as a Non-
Returner (Anāgāmi) if he continues to go on with the practice of insight
meditation with all heart and soul. Then again, an Anāgāmi continuing the
practice of meditation with proper mindfulness will, if true realization is
developed, become an Arahat. Hence, it is obvious that one cannot even
aspire to become a Sotāpanna if the procedure or guideline as stated is not
strictly adhered to. More significantly, if morality or rule of conduct is not
properly observed, or, even with the full accomplishment of morality, if no
contemplation is made with mindfulness on the conspicuous
Upādānakkhandhāat the moment of seeing, hearing, etc., or, if there is no
knowing of the fact or awareness that they are in reality sAnicca, Dukkha
and Anatta, the stage of Sotāpanna cannot possibly be reached.
The salient feature herein emphasized is to note with constant mindfulness
on the reality of the nature of Five Upādānakkhandhāby which the truth of
the dhamma with the characteristics of sAnicca, Dukkha and Anatta will be
distinctly known leading to insight-wisdom of varying degrees.
Mention has been made in this Sutta that if bent upon contemplating the
dhamma with an all out endeavour, a person should first of all, be
accomplished with Sīla Visuddhi (purified conduct), which out of the seven
kinds of Visuddhi, is initially the fundamental requisite for the purpose of
insight meditation.
The light has been shown in this Sutta by way of imparting knowledge
relating to the erroneous concept which goes to say in contradiction as: "It is
not at all necessary to meditate and contemplate since Anicca, Dukkha
Anatta have been known to us. It would be sheer misery if contemplation is
made, and only if the mind is given respite without resorting to
contemplation, mental peace and tranquility can be achieved." The
elucidation given by the author in respect of such an irrational concept as
being definitely wrong amounts to giving a firm ruling in consonance with the
noble wish of the Blessed One. The decision given is a dire necessity
particularly at the present day as there has been a number of dissentient
views entertained by different sects that had sprung up from the time
immediately after the conclusion of the Third Great Buddhist Council-
Saṅgāyanā. For lack of such a ruling in the distant past, Ashin
Mahāmoggliputtatissa Thera had, at that time, preached the great Kathā
Vutthu Dhamma eradicating Micchā of all sorts, such as, the doctrine of
Individuality or the like which was deep in the heretical view of -diṭṭhiAtta,
etc. In those old days however, no false beliefs had appeared that prohibited
the method of practicing the Noble Eightfold Path and the practices
connected with the Samatha-Vipassanā. Now that false doctrines have gone
to the extent of prohibiting or preventing the practical exercise of meditation
on the lines of the Noble Eightfold Path. Hence, if such heresies cannot be
deterred or nipped in the bud, the three divisions of Sāsanānamely,
,Pariyaṭṭi (pursuit of scriptural knowledge), Patipaṭṭi (Practical exercise of
Vipassanā meditation) and Pativeda (Insight Knowledge leading to Magga-
Phala) may soon be faded out.
In especial, the peculiar feature of this Sutta is the strikingly rare revelation
of the noble and distinctive qualities inherent in a Sotāpanna. This would not
only benefit yogīs in many ways but will make it possible for them to
measure up the degree of their own respective spiritual attainments and
reject any fallible misgivings one might have inadvertently entertained. This
is, indeed, a blessing. Moreover, it is a magnificent exposition of the practical
Dhamma in accord with the Mahā Satipaṭṭhāna Sutta, relating to the basic
exercise of contemplating the manifestations of the Five
Upādānakkhandhās, aggregates of clinging or grasping; the development of
mental consciousness of the marks of anicca and dukkha; the Law of
Dependent Origination; the behaviour of rūpa seen realistically through
mind's eye; the doctrine of anatta; cause for appearance of sense of
cravings and the way to eradicate craving instincts by means of insight-
wisdom achieved through the practice of Vipassanā; and how, with the
application of right concentration and mindfulness, Sotāpanna and higher
stages of progressive insight can be achieved. Briefly put, this Sutta
inspiringly discloses the undoubted reliability of the Method of Mindfulness
contemplation on the phenomena of the Five Upādānakkhandhās for the
dramatic achievement of the different stages of insight-wisdom up to
Arahatta-Magga-Phala after having equipped oneself with the purity of good
conduct or morality.
May you all be able to inexorably contemplate on the right lines of Vipassanā
meditation in the present existence foreseeing the unavoidable perils and
miseries that lie ahead in the incessant rounds of life existence, Saṃsāra,
and expeditiously attain spiritual enlightenment leading to the blissful state
of Nibbāna.
Min Swe
PART I
INTRODUCTION
Once Sāriputtarā Thera and Mahā Koṭṭhika Thera were spending their days
together under the tutelage of Buddha residing in Migadāvana monastery or
Deer Park at Isipatāna in Bārāṇasī. Sāriputtarā is too well known as pre-
eminent for wisdom among Buddha's disciples to need any introduction.
Mahā Koṭṭhika is less known. But among Buddha's 80 senior disciples he was
unrivalled in the knowledge of dialectics or Patisambhidā-ñāṇa for which he
also gained pre-eminence.
Once Mahā Koṭṭhika, having spent the whole day in ecstatic meditation, rose
from the jhānic trance, approached Sāriputtarā, and broke into a friendly
conversation with the latter to whom he put the following question.
All sensations arising from the six bases of eye, ear, nose, tongue, body and
mind cause dukkha, suffering or misery. But under the spell of avijjā or
delusion, an individual regards them as pleasurable and become attached to
them, encouraging taṇhā, craving, to arise. It then makes it cling to the
sense-object when upādāna operates. Then the triumvirate, avijjā, taṇhā
and upādāna conspire together to create the round of kilesā, defilement of
the mind. Once under the influence of desire, a form of kilesā, a man
becomes blind to everything except the fulfillment of his desire which works
up kamma, action that causes new becoming. This is life or bhava which
arises out of the ashes of the past existences. But in the course of life a
being is liable to become old and sick and finally death overtakes him with
sorrow, lamentation, suffering, etc., attendant upon it. These are the results
of actions or kamma that I have spoken of and they are called vipāka. Now
we have the three rounds of kilesā vatta, kamma vatta and vipāka vatta
and these three constitute the rounds of rebirths called saṃsāra.
The same dukkha is more conspicuous in the animal world. Animals rarely
die of natural death. Chickens, ducks, cattle, pigs and the like are killed for
human consumption. The lot of beeves is far more heart breaking. They first
render service to humanity as beast of burden to become meat in the end.
Life in the jungle is also not secure, to say the least, for animals, for, there
the weak is also meat for the strong. Besides animals there are other beings
that haunt the abodes of suffering called apāya and naraka of the nether
worlds. There are also beings of the peta-world and of the asuras (who are
usually described as fallen angels). There suffering is at its height. Those
fortunate enough to be reborn in this human world consider that they have
nothing to do with those in the abodes of suffering. But consider it wisely. If
humans do not believe in Kamma, Kamma-result, Kusala (wholesome
actions) and Akusala (unwholesome actions) they would certainly be free to
do evil at will. It is people like them who rush in to get a place for themselves
in any of the abodes of suffering.
One may say that one can find happiness in the world of devas (deities). But
there too one may find cause to be sad when one cannot get what one
desires. When a deva dies with unfulfilled desires, he may have
unwholesome thoughts as he dies, and such thought may drag him down to
the nether worlds. If fortunate he may, perhaps, get reborn in a better world
like the world of the humans; but still he cannot escape suffering due to
aging, disease and death. Such will be his lot for many an uncountable
existence; and if he fails to practice vipassanā, he may repeat falling into
this lot for eons to come, wandering endlessly in the saṃsāra. This is said
not in a blind faith in the doctrine of rebirth, but in deference to the law of
cause and effect as shown by paticcasamuppāda, the law of Dependent
Origination. If one truly studies the cause and the result of actions, one may
come to the realization that the round of rebirth is suffering indeed. It is
because of this realization that a lay man enters the Order with a mind to get
emancipated from woes and miseries of saṃsāra.
Thus craving and wrong views form the two main types of clinging to
the Khandhas, the five aggregates of mind and matter. When Rūpa or
form, the object that we see appears on the eye-basis, we say that we see.
We then assert that the eye-object, the eye-basis and the form are all
tangible, being the product of a living personality. The eye is living, the
object is living and the physical body that sees and recognizes the object is
living. It gives up the impression of the existence of "I" So everyone of us
says, "I see." Everyone of us clings to that "I". To test yourself whether
clinging to the "I" or self exists, please ask yourself the simple question,
"Whom do you love best?"
SELF-LOVE
This question was answered in the time of king Pasenadī Kosala. The story
goes like this.
Mallikā was a flower-girl. One day she met Buddha on her way to the garden.
Moved by faith, she offered some cakes to the Enlightened One, who told her
that because of her meritorious deed she would become a queen. At that
time king Pasenadī was fleeing his kingdom for having lost his battle with
king Ajātasattu. By chance he arrived at the flower-garden and was received
by Mallikā who cared for him well. When peace was restored he made her his
queen.
Not being a courtier like others in the palace, Queen Mallikā was lonely.
Knowing this the king asked her a question in the fond hope that her
appropriate reply would justify his showering more favours on her. "Do you"
he asked, "have any whom you love more than you love me?"
Queen Mallikā thought to herself, "No doubt the king wants a negative reply
signifying that I love him more than I love anyone else. But I cannot tell him
lies just to please him."
So she said, "You Majesty. I love myself best. I have none whom I love more
than I love myself."
This failed to please the King. So Queen Mallikā posed the same question
that the King posed to the King himself. "Do you, she said", "have anybody
whom you love more than you love yourself?"
Next day the King related what passed between him and his Queen to
Buddha who then told him thus.
"Go forth to all the points of the compass and find one who loves others
more than one loves oneself. You shall find none. Since all sentient beings
love their own selves, one should be wary of doing harm to others."
The five khandhas are also called the five upādānakkhandhābecause when
srūpakkhandhāis involved, all other khandhas get involved. The eye is a
sense-organ belonging to rūpakkhandhāWhen it sees, .vedanā, sensation,
saññā, perception, saṅkhāra, mental formation and viññāṇa, consciousness
are involved. When upādānakkhandhāarise one is led to think that what
one sees belongs to one who sees and says: sEtam mama (This is mine).
Then one becomes grasping. And this is taṇhā. When one asserts that his
ego, I, exists, this assertion arises out of the concept of atta or self. This
amounts to clinging to the wrong views or diṭṭhi.
You need not go anywhere in search of these aggregates. They are within
you!
As you fail to note seeing the object with reference to the three marks of
anicca, dukkha and anatta, you might miss reality and think that matter,
feeling, perception, mental formations and consciousness are yourself or
yours. Highly pleased with this idea of self, you cling to it. This view of self
brings about the rise of taṇhā. As clinging is thus worked up, the individual
tries to do things for the satisfactions of desires that arise in him. While
bowing to these desires he happens to resort to actions which may be
wholesome or unwholesome. When these actions are good, he may be
transported to superior abodes in the planes of existence; but if they are
bad, he may go down to the nether worlds. Whatever be the case, he will be
oppressed with suffering throughout the rounds of existence.
Clinging will subside each time seeing is recollected with mindfulness. In
Satipaṭṭhāna Sutta this method of establishing mindfulness is mentioned. It
says: Gacchanto-vā gacchāmīti (know that you go when you go). Note the
four postures of walking, sitting, standing and lying down just as they take
place. Know that you are bending yourself as you bend and stretching
yourself as you stretch. Note every physical behaviour which occurs. When
your power of concentration gets developed, you will come to realize that in
the act of seeing the eye and the object are quite distinct, and so are the
eye-consciousness and the mind-consciousness. These phenomena arise
together in Pairs and get dissolved together. Whatever comes up anew
passes into dissolution. This transience spells dukkha. What one actually
sees is not atta or self. It is only the manifestation of a phenomenon. This
way of thinking dispels the sense of clinging or attachment; and once this
attachment is severed, no new becoming or rebirth can arise. For that
particular instant when one is meditating in this manner suffering ceases.
This means that Nibbāna has been achieved albeit for a brief moment. When
insight-knowledge becomes strengthened by constant practice of meditation,
the round of suffering will be brought to a standstill by dint of the application
of the principles of the Noble Path to Vipassanā clinging to sound objects.
The ear-basis and the sound conspire together to create a sound object
which falls under rūpupādānakkhandhā.
Then clinging arises; and on account of this clinging to the material object,
pleasurable or unpleasurable feelings arise. They constitute
vedanupādānakkhandhā.
Every time you smell, meditate on the nose-basis and the smell-object as
rūpupādana-kkhandhā.
When you get the smell and feel pleasant or unpleasant because of it, note
that vedanupādā-nakkhandhā has arisen.
When you get the smell and recollect it, note that saññupādānakkhandhā is
being brought into play.
Note that mental formations or volitional activities excite clinging. Note them
also as saṅkhā-rūpadānakkhandhā.
Note the arising of consciousness of the smell that you get; it constitutes
viññupādāna-kkhandhā.
Here too, meditate on the tongue-basis and the taste-object which give rise
to rūpudānakkhandhā.
Sense of touch is present everywhere in the body. You touch and know and
there the body-basis lies; and there is not one tiny space in the body where
touch-consciousness is absent. Sensitivity relates to things both inside and
outside the body, which is conscious of the presence of the four primary
Dhātus or elements. It knows hardness or softness, the characteristics of
pathavī, earth element; heat or cold, the characteristic of tejo. fire element
or temperature; motion or resistance to motion, the characteristic of vāyo,
air element or force. Touch-consciousness is therefore the most ubiquitous of
all forms of consciousness. When it is not taken note of with due
mindfulness, reality may not be known. When we see beauty, we recognize it
as such and feel glad. When we see ugliness, we feel repugnant to it. When
we hear pleasant sounds, we say that they are sweet. But jarring sounds, are
considered unpleasant. In this manner we make distinction between pleasure
and pain. As we see, or hear, or smell, or touch an object, we recognize it as
sukha or dukkha, as the case may be. But such pleasure or pain are not real
in the paramaṭṭha or abstract sense of the Abhidhammā. They are merely
the results of actions, wholesome or unwholesome. So they may be viewed
with equanimity for they are merely concepts or paññatti. It is only when a
meditating yogī notes the phenomenal world with mindfulness that he can
discover reality. Then he will get the true knowledge of sukha and dukkha.
As he is noting vedanā, sensation, he becomes aware of the consciousness
of the touch and the mind that is conscious of it as well as
saṅkhārūpadānakkhandhāwhich bends the mind to that consciousness.
Mahāsatipaṭṭhāna Sutta instructs that one must note going as one goes,
standing as one stands, sitting as one sits and lying down as one lies down. A
meditating yogī who has developed the power of concentration by constant
practice of this method of meditation will even be able to become conscious
of the will which causes his movements as he tries to walk. When he walks,
he is setting his nāmakhandhās (aggregates of feeling, perception, mental
formations and consciousness) to work. Pleasure of sukkha vedanā arise
when he feels delighted with walking. If he is recollects that he is walking,
saññā arises. If he makes efforts to walk, saṅkhāra, volitional activities will
take place. When greed and anger get involved in the process of walking --
for instance, when one gets frustrated for not being able to overtake others
-- the volitional activities that we are now talking about are more apparent. If
one is conscious that one is taking a walk, viññāna comes in. If one becomes
tired and stiff or relaxed, one may be sure that vāyo, element of motion is
playing its part. If one fails to take note of all these phenomena connected
with the aggregates of clinging, one becomes obsessed with atta. "I am
walking" one might say. "My body is walking", one might think. Now the idea
of I and Mine has gained ground. But a mediator notes the act of walking
while contemplating the three marks of anicca, dukkha and anatta which
expel all atta.
DEVELOPMENT OF INSIGHT
As one goes on takes a walk, the intention "I want to go" arises. It
prompts the element of motion, vāyo, which sends out an intimation to
rūpa, matter, that the subject has willed to go. Then it gets possession of the
entire body of the subject who is made to move according to instructions.
And this phenomenon is called going.
What this exposition suggests is that there is no atta or self that goes. It is
not I who go; it is citta, mind, served and supported by vāyo that causes
going. Going is only the machination of the mind, in its various
manifestations, that urges the element of motion to serve its will. So it is
only a process of arising and dissolution of citta backed up by vāyo, It is,
however, transient and therefore highly unsatisfactory. It is also
unsubstantial.
Instructions to note the rise and fall of the belly are made with a view to let
the yogī know the work of vāyo. When the chest or the belly is inflated with
air or deflated, one clearly feels the rise or fall. In other words, one feels the
body being contacted by vāyo and the vāyo itself that makes the contact. It
is felt so clearly and definitely that a non-meditating yogī could have been
led to think that the body that receives the contact belongs to him.
Particularly the rising and falling belly is his, so he thinks. In fact the
aggregates of clinging are persuading him to think so. But with a meditating
yogī, whose power of concentration has developed through the continual
practice of Vipassanā, all these phenomena of rising and falling of the belly
denote the actions of the aggregates of mind and matter. Once this idea is
realized, clinging ceases. It is therefore for this purpose of enlightening on
the idea of non-ego that you are being told to note the rising and falling your
belly or abdomen with the application of insight-knowledge.
This meditation exercise is simple and easy. You need not go at length in
search of a mind-object to dwell your mind on. It is conducive to the easy
attainment of the powers of concentration. In this method of meditation you
first concentrate your mind on the rising belly. Meanwhile the belly sags and
falls. Then you shift your attention from the rising to the falling phenomenon.
As you have to exert only the two phenomena taking place in succession,
there will be no occasion for you to overdo concentration. Your effort to
concentrate and the act of concentration will ream in perfectly balanced,
enabling you to gain the power of concentration quickly. With its
development you will eventually be able to dissect Nāmarūpa, the
aggregates, into Nāma, mind and Rūpa, matter. This analytical knowledge
is called Nāmarūpapariccheda-ñāṇa.
When you arrive at this stage you may be aware that, as you are meditating
on standing, the act of standing is quite separate from the act of noting it.
When you meditate on walking, the phenomenon of walking is one and that
of noting is another. When you stretch or bend your body, you may be
conscious that the noting mind and the noted object are not one and the
same, but that they are two distinct things. So what is there in this body of
mine? Nothing except Nāma and Rūpu. There is no living substance in it. If
you continue practicing insight-meditation in this manner, you will come to
the realities of the three marks of Anicca, Dukkha and Anatta.
If one fails to note that object at the instant ideation accurse, the reality of
the law of impermanence of conditioned things can be missed and one will
be led to think that aggregates of clinging to sensations denote self or ego
and that all mental formations and their attributes belong to that self or ego.
Summarizing all that has been said, the following points are worthy of note.
Clinging gives impetus to the idea of self that suggests the existence
of I or Mine.
Now before concluding this part of the discourse, a word about the method
of noting or meditating with reference to mind-objects. As you contemplate
the rise and fall of your belly your mind may stray into objects extraneous to
the subjects of meditation. Note them every time your mind strays into
them. You will have the experience of encountering such mental behaviours
or activities as desire, satisfaction, delight, anger dejection, hatred,
repugnance, fear, shame, pity, faith, sorrow and so forth, as you mentally
watch the movements of your belly. When udayabbaya-ñāṇa, knowledge of
the rise and fall or aggregates, and bhaṅga-ñāṇa, knowledge of dissolution,
get developed in the course of meditation, you will come to understand the
nature of the aggregates of mind, and your meditation will become facile.
Remember that all upādānakkhandhās are within you and that you need
not look for them else-where.
When you note the phenomenal world, you are to note it correctly; that is,
you must apply right mindfulness to the practice of meditation. It means that
you must contemplate the three marks of anicca, dukkha and anatta.
MEDITATION ON ANICCA
The commentaries say that there are three stages in the realization of the
knowledge of anicca.
ANICCA
Commentaries say that the arising and passing away of the noting mind and
its object are the characteristics of anicca. Things which were neither here
nor there before come into being and at the next moment they cease to be.
Whatever arises anew gets dissolved into the past. A meditating yogī gains
personal knowledge about the origination and dissolution of the phenomenal
world. Unmindful persons are not aware of them. They think that the "I" who
has been in existence long before, has been seeing or hearing things that
have also been existing long before. They fail to recognize the dissolution.
This realization is attained not through learning the texts, but through
practical experience gained at the moment of noting things with
mindfulness.
May the audience who have listened to this discourse with respectful
attention know correctly the state of anicca, so that the five aggregates of
clinging can be discarded, enabling them to gain enlightenment in insight-
knowledge and knowledge of the Path which pave the way to Nibbāna where
all sufferings cease.
Sādhu! Sādhu! Sādhu!
Chapter 2
PART II
KNOWLEDGE DEFINED
4. A meditator should realize that all dhammas are but manifestations of the
impermanent and unsatisfactory nature of things.
DEPENDENT ORIGINATION
The basic knowledge for a meditating yogī relates to the recognition of the
khandhas as Dukkha saccā, and of taṇhā, craving, as Samudaya saccā.
Taṇhā is the cause and the khandhas are the effect. This knowledge is
enough for a yogī practicing Vipassanā to realize the dhamma. If, having
realized it, he knows the law of cause and effect, he may be regarded as
accomplished is the knowledge of paticcasamuppāda, the Law of Dependent
Origination, which, put briefly, run as follows.
Ye dhammā hetuppabhāvā,
Tesañca yo nirodho,
All dhammas proceed from a cause. The Tathāgata reveals the cause
and the cessation of that cause. This is the Teaching of the Great Samaṇa.
All these causes and effects are shown succinctly in a few words beginning
with "Ye dhammā."
In the commentaries it has been shown that this gāthā (stanza) reveals
firstly, dukkha saccā; secondly, samudaya saccā; and lastly nirodha and
magga saccās. Dukkha reveals the cause and samudaya the effect. Magga
saccā lays down the Path, and nirodha saccā is the result of treading the
Path. So when we speak of the Four Noble Truths, they embrace the Law of
Dependent Origination and vice versa.
Now a word about this comment. It is quite clear that Channa Thera failed to
note nāmarūpa with mindfulness. Had he done so he would have
concentration developed and been able to distinguish nāma from rūpa.
Ultimately he would have discovered the truth about the origination and
dissolution of conditioned things which are subject to the three marks of
anicca, etc. But in his case, his thinking had been so superficial that he had
not watched the flow of the khandhas with mindfulness. The kind of
meditation that he practiced is called Dubbalavipassanā or Pseudo-vipassanā
which the commentaries speak of in the story of the Brahmaṇa who fled from
truth. Insight-meditation conducive to the development of
nāmarūpapariccheda ñāṇa and paccayapa-riggaha ñāṇa is true vipassanā,
which, in its initial stage is usually called Tarunavipassanā. So it is highly
improper for detractors to cite the example of Channa Thera and mislead
yogīs doing correct meditational exercises from their right path by
suggesting that vipassanā is not to be practiced without a knowledge of
Paticcasamuppāda.
It may be noted here that Channa Thera, with all his failings, attained at long
last to the fruition of the Path the moment he heard Ānandā expound the
Law of Dependent Origination. So even when a meditating yogī is ill-
equipped in his knowledge of the dhamma, he will become proficient in it
under the guidance of his teacher in kammaṭṭhāna.
Water and coconut-oil freeze in cold climate, mostly in central Burma. This
proves that matter changes with temperature. When it is subject to sudden
changes in temperature, it becomes unstable.
The commentaries speak of destruction due to heat in Avici the lowest of the
nether worlds. In summer we sweat copiously due to heat. Burns and electric
shocks are examples of suffering due to heat. When you take broth piping
hot, you experience what heat is. Sweating itself is the result of heat. So
matter undergoes change when subjected to heat.
This change due to hunger and starvation can be found in the world
of petas, departed spirits unable to get released from a state of suffering.
Hunger is most acutely felt in times of famine in this human world. It brings
about change in the stamina of the physical body. In the world of Asurās,
gloomy spirits, water is unknown. Kalakancika, an Asurā, went in search of
water to slake his thirst. He found the waters of the Ganges flowing; but
when he got to the river the entire expanse of water turned into a sheet of
stone-slab. He ran about the place the whole night in the fond hope that he
would at least get a drop of water to drink. When it dawned, a monk in his
daily round for alms-food met him, and discovering that the poor spirit was
unable to reach for the water he sought, he poured it into his mouth. When it
was time for the monk to go he asked the thirsty being if he was satisfied.
Rude as he was, the Asurā said, swearing, "Not one drop of water got into
my mouth. That is the truth. If, what I said is untrue, may I continue to suffer
in this Asurā-world." This is what the scriptures say. If you want to get a
personal knowledge about thirsty conditions, go to villages where water is
scarce. A little distance far off from my native place, Seikkhun village, there
is a hamlet called Khunnakhaukkon where the story still runs current of a
man who actually died of thirst.
Some imaginative people would like to think that, as Rūpa means "change",
what changes is rūpa, and that solidity or hardness, Pathavī, is not rūpa,
heat, tejo, is not rūpa and that what one sees is not rūpa. They are but
Paññattis or concepts and are not real. Such is their way of thinking, the
result of their intellectual exercises. It has come to my knowledge that a
layman teaching kammaṭṭhāna used so far as to assert that the material
body, the subject of contemplation is in itself changeable or perishable,
suggesting the futility of Satipaṭṭhāna exercises in mindfulness. This shallow
interpretation stems from not understanding the commentaries properly.
Rūpa changes; but it is not changing all the time. The change takes place
only when there is a sufficient cause which disturbs its stability. When cold or
heat destabilizes rūpa, it changes. Visuddhimagga Mahāṭīkā says;
Then how is it that Rūpa that changes is applied to the world of the
Brahmas? There, too, rūpa is subject to change when two opposing factors
confront each other. This nature cannot be dispensed with even in the world
of the Brahmas.
But in the world of the Brahmas it is very rare to have two opposing forces,
such as heat or cold, each working against the other. Hence, rūpas that go
to make the Brahmas appear to remain unchanged from the moment of their
rebirth-linking consciousness to that of their death-consciousness. However,
the intrinsic quality of matter is there with them all the time. It may not be
forever changing at every moment, but it changes when conditions set out
above are present.
The realities of the five aggregates of clinging can be seen when the
six modes of consciousness relating to seeing, hearing, smelling, tasting,
touching and thinking arise. At a particular moment of arising, Nāma and
Rūpa are to be noted with reference to the law of Anicca, etc. Failure to
reflect on the three marks would result in the birth of the idea of I or mine
when clinging or attachment will dominate. Noting this attachment with
mindfulness will arrest the flow of Kamma, actions and Saṅkhara, mental
formations, in the absence of which no new becoming can arise. When
becoming ceases, ageing and disease cannot come up and all sufferings
meet their end.
MEDITATING ON DUKKHA
When his power of concentration gets developed a meditating yogī will come
to understand the causes and effects relating to conditioned things, able to
see inwardly for himself the rise and fall of Nāmarūpas. Things come into
being and perish to become again and also perish, ad infinitum. If he thus
sees inwardly this state of continual flux, he would have mastered
Aniccanupassanā, insight into the nature of impermanence of the
phenomenal world. But one's conviction in the reality of this nature must be
deep-seated, for, only then will one truly realize that Dukkha is baneful and
that all baneful things are fearful. This conviction will lead one to the
development of Nibbidañāṇa; knowledge which reflects on the aggregates
as disgustful. Finally wisdom relating to the Path and its Fruition will arise.
This reflection on dukkha is Dukkhānupassanā.
It may not be possible for a yogī to know all the roots of suffering; but when
he is noting conditioned things, he will have a personal experience of the
appearance of suffering which stems from his material body and
consciousness. A sense-object generating unwanted sense-impressions will
certainly produce unpleasurable feelings that are disgusting. This is
suffering.
Rūpa is like a disease or wound. A sick man loses appetite and sleep, unable
to do what he like to do as a healthy individual. He is dependent on others
who nurse him. If he is bedridden it will be all the worse for him. He will have
to be helped to be bathed, clothed, fed and led to his toilet. He will be
compelled to take physical exercises whether he likes them or not. When he
wants to scratch himself, he will be obliged to let someone do it for him.
Thus he is always dependent on others. Rūpa is likewise dependent.
Rūpa is also like a festering sore. Kilesās like greed, anger and delusion are
verily pus flowing out from that sore of the six sense-organs. A meditating
yogī should note this comparison while contemplating dukkha.
Rūpa is also like a thorn in the side. It pierces the flesh and remains tuck
there. One cannot take it out all by oneself.
All evil actions produce unwholesome results. One pays for the crime one
commits. When one's kamma, action, is bad, one lands in trouble. Adversity
drives one almost mad in the struggle for the satisfaction of one's needs in
respect of food, clothing and shelter. In that struggle for existence one may
either be oppressed or victimized, competition being so keen in life. As you
grow older you will realize how trouble-some it is to make out a living. If you
have to do evil just for the sake of your material body and its mental
formations, you shall be destined to the nether worlds.
Rūpa is also compared to fever. There may be many prescriptions for its
cure. But there will hardly be any such for the cure of the fever of nāma and
rūpa which is constantly attacking you. You cannot escape from the
onslaught of these aggregates of mind and matter wherever you may be,
whether in the nether worlds, or in the animal world, or in the world of men
or of devas. They are all made up of suffering. and even when you happen to
be reborn a man, you will be subject to old age, disease and death.
I conclude this discourse with the usual prayer that this audience attain
Nibbāna as quickly as possible by virtue of their wholesome action in
listening to this lecture and meditation on the five aggregates of clinging.
PART III
(Delivered on the 5th waxing of Tagu, 1328 M.E. and on the 14th waning of
Tagu, 1329 M.E.)
My last lecture deals with meditation on nāma, mind and on rūpa, matter,
as subject to the law of anicca, impermanence, dukkha, suffering. I shall
now speak about the same subject in relation to the law of anatta,
insubstantiality. But before going into the matter, let me explain to you what
atta, self or ego, is.
Translation
So matter, in reality, cannot satisfy our wishes and desires regarding what
we want to be or what we do not want to be. Even so, feeling, perception,
mental formations and consciousness are not the self to whom one can make
the request: "Let matter behave thus for me; let matter not behave thus for
me." They all tend to sickness or decay unable to give satisfaction to our
wants and desires.
Earlier I told you that matter should be regarded as an utter stranger to you.
This is in agreement with what Sīlavanta Sutta has to say. It emphasizes the
fact that a devotee should understand the nature of Rūpa which cannot be
overloaded because it is Anatta. If you have a friend, you may request him
to do something for you; and he will certainly oblige. But you cannot do this
to a perfect stranger.
Those believing in the doctrine of Self assume that a living substance takes
up its perpetual abode inside their bodies till they die. When death takes
place the spirit leaves the body of the deceased either through the nose or
through the mouth. This view of self or Atta is termed Nivasī atta.
The egoists also believe that when the material body is destroyed, the
resident self discards its old home to find a new one. It is so infinitesimal that
it can pierce through thick walls, they say. Buddha enjoins us not to look for
it in matter, feeling, perception, mental formations and consciousness. Only
when this notion of ego making matter or Rūpa its home is thrown
overboard, can a devotee see reality.
That all mental, verbal and physical activities are caused by Atta is another
form of egoism known as Karaka atta. An egoist of that category thinks: "I
see, I hear, I go, I stand or I sit, because I am being all the time prompted by
the self." But a meditating yogī who notes with mindfulness the phenomena
of seeing, hearing, etc., as they arise understands that no self exists that
prompts anybody. Actions just take place as matter and mind correlate each
other, the one being the cause while the other the effect. It is with a view to
let the yogī realize the true nature of the phenomena that he is encouraged
to meditate on conditioned things. Remember the instruction: Note that you
are going when you go and apply to all your physical actions like bending or
stretching your body, etc.
When you are feeling miserable or happy, you might think that it is yourself
that is feeling miserable or happy. This stems from a sense of clinging to the
idea of self; and this kind of egoism is called Vedaka atta.
To do away with the idea of self and gain proper knowledge of Anatta,
meditation on the lines hitherto suggested is essential.
The true nature of nāma and rūpa can be known only when one can seize
the moment of occurrence of the phenomenon and meditate on it. In the
analogy of the flash of lightning, it is only when one looks at it the moment
of its occurrence that one knows its origination and dissolution and
understands its true nature. The following three points may, therefore, be
noted.
2. When its true nature is known, origination and dissolution will become
apparent.
3. Only when one can appreciate the rise and fall of the khandhas can one
gain knowledge about anicca.
When one fails to observe the phenomenon at the time of its occurrence,
one is inclined to think that it is continuous. There appears to be no hiatus in
the chain of events. This is santati paññatti, law of continuity. Influenced by
this law one belabours under the notion of I and thinks that one's ego is a
permanent entity that enables one to say," I hear. I see. It is I who think
and know."
A swarm of white ants moving in a file presents to the eye as a long and
unbroken line; but a close look into it would reveal that each individual insect
is unrelated to the other. A meditating yogī does not see any phenomenon
as a continuous chain of events. He sees that it has its precedence and
subsequence which are separate and distinct. What one saw in the past is
not what one sees now. The sense-impression gained a moment ago is not
the same as that being received now. One is entirely distinct and separate
from the other. These remarks apply to all other phenomena connected with
the sense of hearing, touching, thinking and the like. For, as each
phenomenon arises, dissolution follows. When this characteristic is known,
aniccānupassanā ñāṇa is developed.
The four postures or iriyapathas are walking, sitting, standing and lying
down. They help to make the body comfortable. When thus comforted, the
body fails to recognize pain and suffering. The characteristic of dukkha, says
Visuddhi Magga, is covered up by the lack of mindfulness of the nature of its
oppressive tendencies and also by the four postures contributing to that
negligence. If one bends his mind on the oppressive nature of dukkha to the
exclusion of comfort created by the four postures, pain and suffering will be
revealed in all its ignominy.
Dhātus, elements, that go to make nāma, mind, and rūpa, matter are
divisible and analyzable. But an ordinary individual, being unmindful of this
nature, belabours under the notion called ghaṇapaññatti which takes
conditioned things are one indivisible whole, solid and substantial; and this
concept of solidity covers up the true nature of anatta, unsubstantiality. A
meditating yogī, being able to analyse the composition of nāma-rūpa comes
to the understanding that it has no substance whatsoever.
SANTATI GHĀNA
I have dealt with the concept of continuity called Santati paññatti which is
related to santati ghāna. When one looks at an object, one sees its image
for the space of one thought-moment after which it disappears and recedes
into the past. Then the next image immediately fills the vacuum thus caused
giving one the impression that the past is linked with the present to form a
chain of continuity, thus giving rise to the appearance of the sameness of
the object under study. This leads to the belief that the phenomenal world is
unchanging and stable. This is santati ghāna,
When we see a thing, hear the sound it makes and think about it, the acts of
seeing, hearing and thinking are separate and distinct. What we have just
seen or heard or thought about is quite different from what we are seeing or
hearing or thinking about now. But to an ordinary individual the entire
process of seeing, etc., is continuous and the object appears to exist as one
entity throughout the time. From this nature of the process the assumption
of the existence of self or ego that sees, hears or thinks arises. Hence we
say, "I see; I hear; I think," as if this I remains stable and permanent
throughout. Such an assumption stands in the way of a non-meditating
individual in the realization of the truth about anatta. But a yogī noting the
arising and passing away of nāmarūpa gains a clear knowledge of
impermanence and unsubstantiality. The exercise of the knowledge about
this anicca and anatta dispels all concepts of continuity and solidity.
SAMŪHA GHĀṆA
All factors of consciousness combine together to give us an impression of
wholeness or entirety. Eye-consciousness, ear-consciousness, nose-
consciousness, tongue-consciousness and touch-consciousness conspire
together to give us the notion that they collectively together to give us the
notion that they collectively go into the making of an individual who stands
whole and solid. That is to say that all nāmas and rūpas in the domain of
saṅkhāra, volitional activities, constitute individuality or personality. An
ordinary man without insight-knowledge thinks, "I see; I hear; I think,"
however much he has learned from books that matter is divisible into its
components. When a mindful observer looks at himself he comes to the
understanding that the eye-basis, the eye-object, the eye-consciousness and
the feeling of pleasure derived from seeing are all separate and distinct from
one another functionally. One who fails to note seeing as its occurs would
rather prefer to formulating the idea in his mind that all these functions
combine to produce the solid state of atta; and he would say to himself,
"This physical body which possesses the eye constitutes I; the hands and
feet that I now see are mine; the subject who experiences pleasure of the
sight is also myself." Matter coalesced into a mass gives us the impression of
wholeness or entirety which then is mistaken for solidity that is identified as
an individual. This is called samūha ghāna.
KICCA GHĀṆA
ĀRAMMAṆA GHĀṆA
Seeing occurs when the mind dwells on the eye-object; hearing when it
dwells on the ear-object; smelling when it dwells on the nose-object; tasting
when it dwells on the tongue-object; touching when it dwells on the tangible-
object; and thinking when it dwells on the mind-object. In all these
phenomena the sense-objects are varied and many; but the subject appears
to be one and the only individual for all the actions relating to seeing, etc.,
are created by him. This is the concept of solidity conjured up by a combined
force of many different sense-objects. It is called Ārammaṇa ghāna.
A yogī who has developed insight knowledge is fully aware that seeing and
hearing by one individual are two different phenomena although he sees the
object simultaneously as he hears it making the sound. Confining himself to
only one phenomenon - - seeing for instance - - he is able to appreciate the
fact that what he saw a moment ago is not the same as that he is now
seeing. What is more, he is able to understand that the eye-object that he is
meditating upon dissolves at the very moment of his meditation. To him,
therefore, the many processes of seeing, hearing etc., are not attributable to
an individual. They are just the manifestations of various aspects of the
phenomenon. This way of thinking virtually destroys the notion of solidity,
and leads one to the knowledge of anatta.
When matter is analysed and broken down into its components, the idea of
materiality usually disappears. Some would like to think that when this
knowledge of disappearance arises anatta ñāṇa is established. But this
casual knowledge cannot lead one to the conviction of the doctrine of
unsubstantiality, for although materiality in its physical sense has been
discarded it still clings to the individual in its spiritual sense. If the idea of
materiality still remains in his consciousness, he will not be able to visualize
anatta. In the formless realm Brahmas possess no physical body; but as they
still retain consciousness, they regard it as their self. So they cannot
conceive anatta. One may be able to do away with the idea of body but one
still clings to the idea of mind. It must be remembered that even when one
has attained paññatti or conceptual knowledge about anatta, one may not
become firmly established in the paramattha or real knowledge about it. It is
only when one meditates on the rise and fall of the khandhas, the
aggregates of mind and matter, to gain a personal and practical experience
of their nature of ungovernability that one can say with certainty that he
knows what unsubstantiality is. Outside the Sāsanā, rishis like Sarabhaṅga, a
Bodhisatta, could expound anicca and dukkha but not anatta, as it is very
difficult to explain. Buddha himself had to explain anatta to the group of five
monks by first introducing the subject of anicca and dukkha.
But the law of anicca that people outside this Sāsanā know is highly
elementary. When a pot is broken one is reminded that it is subject to the
law of impermanence. When one stumbles and gets hurt, one would exclaim
to himself that life is all suffering. But such revelations are all paññatti
knowledge which can hardly be improved upon unless the absolute truth
about anicca and dukkha is visualized through insight-meditation.
But one should not lose heart. In the first Sutta of Nava Nipāta of Aṅguttara
Nikāya it anatta can also be known. The commentaries also explain that
once anicca is known, dukkha and anatta can be recognized.
ADVANTAGES OF MEDITATION
What, it may be asked, are the advantages of meditation on the three
marks? Regarding this, note what Sāriputtarā said:
In my next lecture I shall deal with this subject about stream-winners. Now I
conclude with the usual prayer.
May you all, who have listened to this discourse on Sīlavanta Sutta attain
Nibbāna having realized the nature of the five aggregates of clinging through
the practice of insight-meditation!
PART IV
(Delivered on the full moon day and 15th, waning of Kason, 1329 M.E.)
JHĀNA SUTTA
Here the mind becomes bent on Nibbāna when the yogī gets truly convinced
of the unwholesomeness of all Saṅkhāras or mental formations and when
he tries to get away from them and embrace Nibbāna, encouraged by the
knowledge of the Path. It must also be noted here that one cannot gain the
knowledge of the Path without the practice of insight-meditation.
ANICCA SUTTA
I shall now tell you what Anicca Sutta of Khandhavagga Saṃyutta has to say
about meditation that leads to the enlightenment of Nibbāna ñāṇa,
knowledge of the khandhas as being disgusting:
These are the words of Buddha when he was explaining the dhamma relating
to Paccavekkhaṇā ñāṇa, knowledge of self-appreciation.
In the Khandhavagga, Dukkha Sutta and Anatta Sutta follow Anicca Sutta,
and the same observations apply.
Disgust can be truly developed only when the faults and foibles of
the khandhas are fully realized. Those living in the dry zone are oblivious to
the unfavourable conditions under which they live. Only when thirst and
hunger assault them as a result of drought, they realize their shortcomings
and leave the place in disgust. All sentient beings are usually pleased with
their bodies of the khandhas that they cling to them without giving any
thought to the three marks of Anicca, Dukkha and Anatta. They lack
conviction and faith in the teaching. For them the road to Nibbāna is closed.
IGNORANCE OF UPĀDĀNAKKHANDHĀS
When insight knowledge is gained, one becomes weary of the burden of the
khandhas. When one's power of concentration gets stronger and stronger
through the practice of insight meditation, one becomes fully aware of the
fact that the Rūpa, the object, that is known arises and passes away along
with Nāma, the subject, that knows, and that the former is the cause while
the latter is the effect. This phenomenon of continual arising and passing
away is transience and spells misery or ill. As no agency can control or
govern it, what we consider as the self is after all unsubstantial and void.
This knowledge indicates the dawn of reason or the birth of the investigative
tendency called Sammāsana ñāṇa.
Having mastered this knowledge, the yogī leaves aside Pīti and goes on with
his meditation till he clearly sees in his mind's eye the phenomenon of
origination and dissolution of the aggregates, especially the speedy
dissolution of the noting mind and the noted object together in pairs. At this
stage he may be noting the rise and fall of his belly without being aware of
the belly. In the same manner when he meditates upon the act of walking,
extending or stretching his limbs, he is unaware of the shape of his limbs or
the manner of his movements. Now he has gained Bhaṅga ñāṇa, knowledge
of dissolution of the aggregates, here represented by his noting mind and
the noted object, Ārammaṇaka and Ārammaṇa respectively. This stage of
knowledge is described in Visuddhi magga as follows:
Here the idea of self is totally wiped out by the knowledge of dissolution.
When all dhammas are known to decay at any time, fear sets in. The
knowledge of that fear is Bhāya ñāṇa. This prompts one to arrive at the
knowledge of the five aggregates of clinging as evil, and this knowledge is
called ĀWhen one looks at them in disgust, dinava ñāṇa.Nibbidā ñāṇa
operates. When this sense of revulsion is developed one abandons all desire
to keep them as one's own possession One looks forward to dispensing with
them altogether. This knowledge as regards the wish to escape from the
shackles of the khandhas is called Muncitukamyatā ñāṇa.
If you really want to escape from the burden of the khandhas you must make
further endevours in the practice of meditation. In fact you must make a
special effort to reflect on the contemplation of the five aggregates of
clinging as subject to the law of Anicca, Dukkha and Anatta; and this
knowledge of reflection is called Patisaṅkhā ñāṇa. When this knowledge
becomes strengthened, a sense of equanimity towards all conditioned-things
will be developed; and it is called Saṅkharupekkhā ñāṇa. Visuddhi Magga
comments on this with the parable of fisherman.
While fishing a fisherman caught something big in his trap. Much delighted
with the catch, he put his hand in the trap and grappled it. When he
withdrew his hand, he discovered that he had caught a big snake by the
neck which had three marks by which its poisonous nature is to be known.
Much alarmed, he attempted at throwing away the poisonous snake; but it
would be dangerous to throw it away under the conditions obtaining. So he
waved it three times over his head and flung it away. As it was flying in the
air he ran for his life.
If you want to escape from evil recognizing it as evil, it is imperative that you
must practise insight meditation with reference to the Three Marks of
Anicca etc. If you are misled into the belief that contemplation of the Three
Marks are superfluous since you have understood already, you can never
reach the stage of Muncitukamyata ñāṇa without which emancipation is not
possible.
The kinds of insight that I have enumerated are in accordance with what has
been expounded in Patisambhidā Magga.
MEDITATION LEADING TO THE STATE OF A SOTĀPANNA
The following is what Milinda Paññā has to say about the matter.
When saṅkhārupekkhā ñāṇa gets strengthened, the yogī gets to the next
stage of anuloma ñāṇa, knowledge of adaptation to Nibbāna, in its vigorous
form. After that he gains the knowledge of the Path and its Fruition when he
becomes a sotāpanna, the fundamental stage which Sāriputtarā explained
to Koṭṭhika Thera.
Visuddhi Magga says that once the mind adverts to the element of Nibbānic
peace, defilements, kilesā, disintegrate, although ordinarily such
defilements as greed, anger and ignorance are unbreakable like iron or steel.
When a worldling comes face to face with pleasant things, he wants to
possess them, and thereby greed arises. But when he comes into contact
with unpleasantness, he develops revulsion accompanied by resentment.
Ignorance, on the other hand, deludes him into thinking that what is
wholesome is not wholesome and vice versa. Here in passing, let me point
the impropriety of giving charity publicized by entertainments of music and
dancing. The donor may feel gratified with this manner of alms-giving; but it
leads to unwholesome actions like developing greed and covetousness. It
must be borne in mind also that when greed arises, anger accompanies it.
When desire develops, the greedy person becomes highly possessive and if
he fails to get what he wants he becomes angry. Greed usually gives him the
impression that everything is permanent, nicca, delightful, sukkha, and
substantial, atta.
Meditation on the aggregates with due regard to the Three Marks of anicca,
etc can eradicate all tendencies to defilements called anusayas. But even
then it can hardly can do away with that kind of disposition inherent in the
concept of continuity called santānānusaya. Only Ariya Magga (Noble Path)
can wipe it out. Hence the saying that Sotāpatti Magga (Stream-winning
Path) can break the rocks of defilements. But here defilements refer to
sakkāya diṭṭhi, view of individuality, vicikiccā, doubt, and
sīlabbataparāmāsa, false religious practices, that pave the way to the world
of miserable existence.
When all doubts about the three gems are dispelled, he develops confidence
in the practice of sīla, morality, samādhi, concentration, and paññā,
knowledge.
Now he has become established in right conduct, doing away with all false
religious practices which negate sīla, samādhi and paññā as well as the
Noble Eightfold Path. He now disdains the teaching that agelessness and
deathlessness can be achieved when he goes to heaven without the
advantage of the Four Noble Truths and the Noble Eightfold Path.
At the time of Buddha there was a devotee by the name of Visākha. Her
father-in-law worshipped naked heretics. Once he threw a feast for his
pseudo-saints and invited his daughter-in-law also to the feast. When she
discovered that they were all false, she left them in disgust, saying, "Fie
upon you!"
Sotāpanna are free from the bonds of false views, doubts and false religious
practices. This is according to the Pāḷi canon. The commentaries go further
than that and say that they are free from the bond of macchariya, envy.
Visuddhi magga says that the Path, Sotāpatti magga, dries up the ocean of
saṃsāra, the endless round of suffering, beside bringing down the stone-wall
of greed asunder. The word "endless" denotes that the rounds have no
beginning. This means that saṃsāra has a long, long last; and so far we
have not yet been able to alienate ourselves from it. That we cannot help.
But we must try to cut it off so that it cannot arise in future. If we fail to do
so, it will create endless suffering for times to come. It can only be arrested
with the practice of the Noble Path. The volume of water on the ocean can be
measured, but the magnitude of saṃsāra is immeasurable. If, therefore, the
Path is not realized now, the saṃsāra will flow on!
There is a saying that for an Ariya accomplished in the Path, all gates to
apāya are closed. No doubt a sotāpanna cannot be held to have discarded
greed, anger and ignorance altogether, but still he has closed all doors to
unwholesome actions. Hence the following points are given as a gist of what
has been said.
2. He never doubts about the three gems of Buddha, Dhamma and Sangha.
3. With him the ocean of the rounds of suffering has been rendered dry.
The Noble Path brings wealth to the Noble Ones, and there are seven
kinds of them. But their wealth is unlike the material wealth of mankind. A
gardener's wealth is his vegetables, and a jeweller's his gold and precious
stones. They are very useful to them throughout their lives and for that
matter, they are very pleased with them. But when they die they cannot
carry them away to their next existences. Their usefulness ends with their
demise. Such material wealth pales into insignificance when compared to the
spiritual or moral wealth of the Noble Ones which proves beneficial to them
throughout their rounds of existence. Possessing it, they know not suffering;
and this absence of suffering constitutes the highest form of happiness for
those who have become sotāpannas.
Faith, morality, sense of shame (to do evil), fear (of doing evil),
knowledgeableness, good conduct, and wisdom are the seven categories of
wealth possessed by the Noble Ones. Those possessing such wealth, whether
men or women, are to be considered as rich. Their lives are worth living.
Faith in the three gems or Buddha, Dhamma and Sangha is made possible by
Sotāpatti Magga. This subject has been dealt earlier.
Regarding morality, sīla, the scriptures say that a layman observing the five
precepts can prosper in life and can never be committed to the four apāyas
hereafter. His life would be all the more ennobled if he observes eight or ten
precepts. With sotāpannas the five precepts are never broken, and so there
is no occasion for him to go down to the world of misery. In the course of his
teachings, Buddha has said that one who has established his faith in the
three gems of Buddha, Dhamma and Sangha, having accomplished himself
in morality, may declare himself as a sotāpanna.
Hīri, sense of shame, and ottappa, fear, are two wholesome dispositions of
mind that guide people towards absolute purity. One possessing these two
virtues would hesitate to do evil or commit crimes. Such a one will be
regarded as abstaining from evil actions or ducaritas that bring about
akusala kammas, unwholesome actions.
Knowledge, suta, is of two kinds, one derived from what one hears at second
hand from others and the other at first hand from his own personal
observation. A yogī in the habit of practicing dhamma is deemed to have
possessed both kinds of knowledge.
Lay devotees, whether male or female, who possess the seven noble
attributes shown herein, are held to be wealthy although they may be
materially poor. Such wealth always proves beneficial to them.
At the time of Buddha there was a leper born with untold suffering. When his
mother conceived him, she was afflicted with starvation. When he was born
she had to beg both for herself and for her newly-born baby. But when he
came of age she abandoned him giving him her begging bowl. So the leper
wandered the street a-begging in the day and sleeping at night whimpering
because of his disease. This so disturbed his neighbours that they named
him Suppabuddha--the man who awakens others at night.
One day he met a gathering listening to the sermon delivered by the Buddha
as he made his daily round for alms-food. At first he thought that the crowd
had gathered because some one was throwing a feast to passers-by. But
discovering that it was an informal religious meeting, he gave a respectful
ear to the preaching when Buddha deliberately selected a discourse that
suited to the beggar's intelligence, knowing that he possessed potentialities
that would go to make him see the light of the dhamma. As a result of this
Suppabuddha attained Sotāpatti magga, the path of a stream-winner.
He thus became a stream-winner for two reasons. Firstly he had reached the
stage of perfection that stood him in good stead for the realization of the
path and its fruition, and, secondly, he had been moved by saṃvega,
feelings of fright or repentance for previous misdeeds. People in affluence
are seldom so agitated by this sense of fright, and so their faith is weak.
He trailed behind Buddha to go the monastery and left him in the end to go
his own way. Meantime the king of devas had come down to earth with
intent to test the faith. "Look here, Suppabuddha," he said, "if only you do
what I say I will cure you of your disease and make you rich. Say that
Gotama is not really enlightened and that his teachings false, and that his
sanghas are spurious. If you just declare that you will have none of them, I
will give you all the riches that you want."
Coming to know the stranger as the King of devas, Suppabuddha was very
much mortified and said. "You, the King of devas, are foolish and unabashed.
It is not worthy of me to get into conversation with you. You say that I am
poor. But possessing the seven kinds of wealth of the Noble One, I am indeed
the richest man on earth.
The King of devas left him and went to the monastery and related the
incident to the Buddha who told him that he would never be able to shake
the faith of Suppabuddha.
After this incident Suppabuddha was gored to death by a stray cow. This was
due to his bad Kamma or actions. In one of his previous existences he was
the son of a rich man. He and his three companions killed a prostitute for her
money after they had had their pleasure. The dying woman swore that she
would be avenged in the existences to come. Whenever the four miscreants
got reborn as men, she appeared as an ogre eating them up one by one.
Now it so happened that Suppabuddha was reborn a man along with his
friends, Pukkusāti, Daruciriya and Tambadāthika, while the ogre was also
reborn as a cow. She gored them to death one by one under different
circumstances.
I would like to point out in parenthesis that the woman's vengeance was to
her own disadvantage, for Kamma-results would overtake her throughout
her future existences. But for the four who were gored to death they are to
be considered as fortunate, in ordinary parlance, for Daruciya entered
parinibbāna as an Arahat, while Pukkusāti became a Brahma in Suddavāsa,
destined to become an Arahat later, whereas Tambadāthika became a deva
in Tusitā. Suppabuddha who died a sotāpanna was reborn in Tavatimsā,
released from suffering as a leprous beggar of this human world. Had he not
met this kind of fate, he would have to continue to be miserable throughout
his life as a beggar.
Gotrabhū cetanā is that kind of volition which inclines towards the Path, its
Fruition and Nibbāna. (Gotrabhū transcends the Sense Sphere lineage to
aspire to the sublime lineage.) In Vipassanā it is the highest stage of
knowledge which can bring about the most exalted Kamma-results.
Suppabuddha was reborn a deva because of his Gotrabhū cetanā.
When he gained his place in Tāvatimsā, he was more powerful than other
devas who preceded him by dint of their wholesome actions done outside
the domain of Buddhasāsanā. As envy got the better of them, the veterans
made unfavourable remarks about the new arrival saying that he was only a
leprous baggar in his former existence. The King of devas restrained them
saying that Suppabuddha was superior to them because he was
accomplished in morality, knowledge, charitableness and wisdom. I hope the
story about him would encourage the yogīs to try to accumulate wholesome
actions through the practice of insight-meditation.
Pathabya karajjena,
Sabbalokādhipaccena,
sotāpattiphalam varam.
For fuller details on this subject please refer to my discourse, "On the Nature
of Nibbāṅa" I conclude by drawing your attention to the fact that knowledge
leading to Sotāpanna magga (1) rends asunder all defilements, (2) dries up
the ocean of Saṃsāra. (3) closes all doors to Apāya and (4) endows one
with the seven kinds of wealth befitting an Ariya, the Noble One.
May you all attain to the state of Nibbana as quickly as possible by virtue of
your practice of insight-meditation in accordance with the teachings of the
Enlightened One regarding meditation on the five aggregates of clinging in
relation to the three marks of Anicca, Dukkha and Anatta.
PART V
(Delivered on the 14th. Waning of Nayon and the 8th. Waning of Wāso, 1329
M.E.)
This is the seventh lecture in the series entitled "A Discourse on Sīlavanta
Sutta", re-arranged here as Part V. Previously I have enumerated the four
virtues of the Part of a stream-winner and now I propose to tell you the
remaining virtues.
Visuddhi Magga says that Sotāpatti magga renounces the eightfold wrong
path, namely, wrong views, wrong thoughts, wrong speech, wrong actions,
wrong livelihood, wrong efforts, wrong mindfulness and wrong concentration.
Those rooted in the belief that one lives only one life which becomes
annihilated after one's death consider the accumulation of wholesome
actions and abstention from evil as fruitless and therefore unnecessary. With
them there is no kamma, wholesome or unwholesome, nor kamma-results.
Of all the wrong views, this view of annihilation is the most damaging.
Sammādiṭṭhi dispels this wrong view.
Micchāmagga, wrong path, paves the way to the four woeful states of
existence collectively known as apāya. But even if one can avoid it and gets
reborn in the human world, it can produce kamma-results of miserable
existence. And so, one may be born short-lived, diseased, or destitute.
Consider Suppabuddha mentioned in my last lecture. He indulged in using
bad language against a Paccekabuddha for which unwholesome action he
suffered in the nether worlds. His wrong speech was motivated by wrong
thoughts or intentions which misled him to wrong efforts. And in this way a
chain of wrongfulness arises up to the stage of wrong concentration. Hence
Suppabuddha was reborn a leprous beggar and killed by a cow, as a kamma
result of his misdeeds against a woman of pleasure. So the virtue of a
sotāpanna consists in his practice of the Noble Eightfold Path.
The first group of five consists of dangers arising from (1) killing, (2) theft.
(3) unlawful sexual intercourse, (4) lying and (5) taking intoxicants.
Aṅguttara Nikāya says that they are to be regarded as the most dangerous
enemies that negate morality, and pave the way to nether worlds. A
sotāpanna cannot be assailed by such enemies.
Vibhaṅga, again, mentions four dangers, namely (1) birth (2) aging (3)
disease and (4) death. A sotāpanna cannot escape from these dangers but
he has to meet them only for a space of seven existences after which he will
be totally released from them. Then there are also four dangers arising from
the four enemies of mankind; and they are (5) rulers, (6) thieves, (7) fire and
(8) water which are usually added to the first four. A sotāpanna may be
harassed by these four enemies in his present existence; but it is possible for
him to avoid them in his future existences because of his wholesome actions.
To this second set of four may be added the third set consisting of dangers
arising (9) from rough seas, (10) from crocodiles (11) from whirlpools and
from (12) marine monsters. These suggest dangers usually met by travellers
crossing the ocean. But they must not be taken literally. Buddha was making
a reference to dangers that detract bhikkhus from their aim of renouncing
the world to get liberated from rebirth, old age, disease and death. A newly-
ordained monk may find it irksome to be guided by his mentors, who usually
are younger then himself. Intolerant of the strict instructions and angry with
the task masters, he leaves the Order to become a lay man again. Such ex-
monks are likened to people drowning in the rough seas. Rules of discipline
relating to priestly conduct have many restrictions which prove distressing to
a new monk. He therefore leaves the Order to enjoy freedom as a lay man.
He is likened to a man wrestling with crocodiles in the river. A neophyte,
coming into contact with mundane life as he goes round for alms-food, is
often reminded of his former home-life. Developing ennui with the life of a
recluse, he turns a lay man again. He is likened to a man thrown into a
whirlpool. Then there is the monk who reverts to the life of a householder all
because of a woman. He is likened to a drowned man eaten up by marine
monsters.
Then there is the fourth set of dangers arising from (13) Attānuvāda, self-
accusation, (14) Parānuvāda, allegations by others (15) punishment and
(16) Apāya, abodes of misery.
When a person accuses himself, the case against him must usually be true.
Such a person is deemed immoral. But the like of him cannot be found
among sotāpannas. When others accuse him of crimes, the allegations may
be either true of false. It may not be possible for a sotāpanna to be falsely
accused. He may, therefore, have no qualms about it. But he may not be
able to escape from punishment meted out to him by authorities even
though charges against him are false. But such wrong punishments cannot
happen to a sotāpanna in his future existences. But a sotāpanna can have
no fear of going down to apāya.
These 16 dangers are not only mentioned in vibhaṅga but also in Aṅguttara
Nikāya and Sammohavinodhanī Aṭṭhakathā.
The fifth set of dangers relates to (17) ñāti byāsana, misfortunes befalling
relatives, (18) bhogabyāsana, economic disasters, (19) rogabyāsana,
destruction by disease, (20) sīlabyāsana, moral breakdown and (21)
diṭṭhibyāsana, destruction by wrong views.
The last set consist of (22) ajīvika, vocational hazards (23) asiloka,
ignominy, (24) parisasarajjā, timidity or self-consciousness for one's own
sins and (25) dubbhikkha, famine. A sotāpanna is liable to meet these
dangers, except perhaps, dangers arising out of famine and starvation.
A sotāpanna is a true progeny of Buddha because his faith in the three gems
is firm and unwavering. Worldlings who have not realized the Path and its
Fruition cannot be regarded as his true progeny because their faith can
waver under the influence of diverse guides and teachers who deviate from
the truth.
BLESSINGS
A sotāpanna is always blessed with the beneficial result of faith in the three
gems. Anchored in faith, he has no necessity look out for other guides and
teachers as worldlings do. He abides in the joy of the realization of the true
dhamma. He is destined to be an Arahat after the lapse of seven existences
from the day he becomes a sotāpanna. Before he attains to Arahatship, he
can always find shelter in the dhamma which safeguards him from falling to
the ignoble planes of existence.
PACCAVEKKHAṆĀ ÑĀṆA
I shall now say briefly about paccavekkhaṇā ñāṇa, knowledge derived from
self-examination or self-appreciation. They are of two kinds, one relating to
the contemplation of the contemplation of the Path, its Fruition and Nibbāna.
Earlier I have mentioned gotrabhū which marks the sublime stage in
Vipassanā practice when a yogī's mind is sanctified and ennobled through
meditation on the arising and passing away of nāma and rūpa. At this stage
one looks back in retrospect at the Path trodden, at the phenomenon of
cessation of the khandhas and at the extinction of the state of the flux of
the khandhas. Abhidhammattha Saṅgaha, however, defines that
paccavekkhaṇā is self-examination in relation to how much of kilesā has
been expelled or not expelled.
THIRD MAHĀPACCAVEKKHAṆĀ
Worldlings who delights in the pleasures of the senses do not regard self-
indulgence as sinful. So they have no qualms about it. But a Sotāpanna is
always mindful that sensual pleasures generate defilements of the mind and
so he is very careful of them although he may or may not be able to get
away from them.
If, after self-examination, a yogī finds that he has been endowed with the
seven virtues as suggested by the principles of Mahāpaccavekkhaṇā, he
may rest assured that he has all the qualifications that go to make a
Sotāpanna.
Now I shall close with the usual prayer for the audience attending this lecture
to be blessed with Nibbānic peace after having realized the Path of a
Sotāpanna.
PART VI
(Delivered on the 8th. Waxing and the Full Moon day of Wagaung, 1329
M.E.)
I have so far delivered eight lectures in the last two of which I talked about
the virtues of stream-winner, Sotāpanna, who usually makes a self-appraisal
of himself by exercising Paccavekkhaṇā ñāṇa. Now I shall deal with the
three types of Sotāpanna.
THREE TYPES
VAṬṬAJJHĀSAYA SOTĀPANNA
That a sotāpanna wanders progressively through all the six celestial planes
cannot be taken as textually precise, for Sakkapaṇhā Sutta, the original Pāḷi
canon, says of Sakka, the king of devas as dying an anāgāmi while in
Tāvatimsä and being reborn in Akaniṭṭha the highest in Suddhavāsa, to
realize the Path and its Fruition as an Arahat. There are other instances of
sotāpānna being born and born again seven times in the human world to
become Arahats in their last existence. Likewise, there are others who were
born again and again in any of the celestial planes to become Arahats in
their last existence. They, however, do not come under the category of
sattakkhattuparama which name is applied only to those who go back and
forth from one existence in the human world to another in one of the
celestial planes during the tendency of their Arahatship.
COUNTING EXISTENCES
After the attainment of the knowledge of the Path a sotāpanna enjoys the
fruits of that knowledge when he is said to be entranced to the Fruition of
the Path which is a technical term that has been explained in Visuddhi
Magga.
When a yogī meditates on the five aggregates of clinging, his mind becomes
bent on cessation of those aggregates. Then he acquires udayabbaya
knowledge about the dissolution of the khandhas, and as he continues
meditating on them, insight knowledge blossoms forth in him stage by stage
till he wins saṅkhāruppekkhā ñāṇa, knowledge of equanimity. It is not
unusual for a well-practised yogī to arrive at this stage of wisdom after a
couple of minutes meditation. When this intellectual progression gains
momentum, he will be transported to the stage of peace where rūpa and
nāma cease. That is his being entranced to the state of Fruition of the Path
of a Sotāpanna to come within sight of Nibbāna. In his usual meditation he
might have come to this stage for a space of two or three instants of his
thought process; but when ecstatic meditation is achieved, he will be able to
hang his thoughts on cessation or Nibbāna for more than two or three
minutes, or for ten, twenty or thirty minutes, or even for an hour, depending
on the strength acquired by Saṅkharupekkhā ñāṇa.
When Koṭṭhika thera asked Sāriputtarā about the dhamma that a Sotāpanna
should recollect, the latter laid emphasis on meditation on the five
aggregates of clinging as before. In this respect there is no distinction
between an ordinary yogī and a Sotāpanna, both being urged to take up
insight-meditation on the same lines suggested in my earlier discourses. A
worldling unused to Vipassanā practice may be oppressed by Taṇhā diṭṭhi,
wrong view prompted by craving. But a Sotāpanna can sever the bond of
attachment to it. Albeit he may be oppressed with Taṇhā māna, conceit
prompted by craving. As this conceit is allied with craving, it is also called
Diṭṭhi māna. A man belabouring under this kind of conceit usually asserts, "I
am. I can do. I know." This is called Asmi māna or self-conceit. After the
group of five monks became Sotāpannas after hearing the Dhammacakka
sermon, Buddha preached them Anattalakkhaṇā Sutta, the discourse on Not-
self, because he would like them to get rid of self conceit born of the wrong
view of ego-entity. I would urge all yogīs to practise insight-meditation
continually till perfection is attained, for one's achievement is likely to fritter
away without repeated exercises which can lead one to Saṅkhārupekkhā
ñāṇa with the least effort. But he may find it rather difficult to cross the
Rubicon for higher knowledge in the absence of right exertion.
Once Mahānāma asked Buddha: "I have long realized that greed, anger and
delusion, always burning like fire, are the result of an impure mind. Although
most of us are aware of this fact, it so happens that our wholesome mind is
overwhelmed at times by them. Why should that be so?"
Mahānāma asked this question because it occurred to him that there might
be other kilesās which a Sakadāgami could not get rid of although it was an
accepted fact that Sakadāgāmi Path does annihilate the defilements of
greed, anger and delusion.
An Anāgāmi totally rejects lust and malevolence. Not for him are the five
constituents of sensual pleasures, nor sex, nor such, sensual objects as form,
sound, smell, taste and touch. Released from kāmarāga, lustfulness, he
establishes himself in absolute happiness.
When the rich Ugga became an Anāgāmi at the time of Buddha, he called up
his four wives and said: "I have now become a celibate observing the precept
of Brahmacariya, noble conduct. You can live here in my house, if you
please, enjoying all the wealth and comfort that it gives and doing
meritorious deeds. Or, if you desire to get a new husband, please say so."
The eldest of the wives said that she would take a new husband of her
choice. Unruffled, Ugga sent for the man and wedded him to his erstwhile
wife.
On his arrival at Rājagraha for the first time, Buddha was welcomed by king
Bimbisāra. There he preached the dhamma to an audience of 120,000
among whom being Visākhā, the millionaire, who at once became a
Sotāpanna. From then on the rich man frequented the monastery to listen to
Buddha preach. Subsequently he was raised to the state of an Anāgāmi.
Rerunning home, the Anāgāmi was met as usual by his wife Dhammadinnā
who at once noticed the change in her husband when the latter neglected
her presence. At bed time the husband retired to another room to sleep
there alone. After two or three nights the wife could contain herself no longer
and demanded him to say either if he had found another mistress or if she
had been unwisely. "Dhammadinnā", he explained, since I have had the
advantage of becoming illumined by the dhamma, I cannot have a man-and-
wife relationship with you. I own 40-crore worth of property and you own
likewise. Now take both my portions and yours and be the lady of this house.
But do look after me. I shall be content with what you nurture me. If you
want to marry again, go back to your parent with all the property that you
now possess and do so. If you want to remain here, just please yourself. I
shall always regard you as my own sister, nay, as my own mother."
Then Dhammadinnā asked him if it would be possible for a woman to abide
in the dhamma like all men. On being assured that it was quite possible, she,
with her husband's permission, got herself ordained. She then became an
Arahat in no time winning pre-eminence as the best preacher of the Law.
Years ago I came to know a woman in her late forties who took up
insight-meditation. After she had realized the dhamma she developed a
sense of ennui in relation to her home life with her husband. So she
persuaded him to take her younger sister as his wife so that has could be
free to lead a religious life. She came of an affluent family efficiently
managing her household. Yet she wanted to renounce her all and succeeded
in doing so.
When Sotāpannas and Anāgāmis reach the realm of form or formless realm
they attain to the state of the higher Path and its Fruition and enter
parinibbāna from the respective Realms. Such Ariyas are known as jhāna
anāgāmis.
When a Sotāpanna established in the first jhāna dies and is reborn in the
world of Brahmās, he can aspire to the state of a jhāna anāgāmi, as is
shown in the case of Unnabha. One day he came to the monastery and
listened to the sermon propounded by the Buddha. He at once became a
Sotāpanna winning the first jhāna. Seeing this, Buddha said: "If Unnabha,
who has just left the monastery, dies before reaching home, the bonds of
Samyojānas which entangle him to this kāmaloka, sense-sphere, will be
severed." Here note that the emphasis is on "Before reaching home." There
is the possibility that if he reached home his jhāna might be disturbed by his
home surroundings including his wife and family --- which are all sense-
objects of pleasure. Before getting home he was abiding in the first Jhāna,
and if he died in that state of Jhāna he would be transported to the world of
Brahmas where he could aspire to the state of a Jhāna Anāgāmi. If he fails
to become an Arahat in the plane of the first Jhāna, he would attain
Arahatship in the plane of the second Jhāna and failing there he would do so
in the plane of the third jhāna. Were that not possible, he would become an
Arahat at Vehapphala abode in the world of Brahmas.
May you all who have listened to this discourse attain the Path and its
Fruition by virtue of your insight-meditation on the five aggregates of
clinging and finally get to Nibbāna.
PART VII
(Delivered on the 8th. Waning of Wagaung and the Full Moon day of
Tawthalin, 1329 M.E.)
That an Anāgāmi comes into being in the world of Brahmās in the realm of
form or formless realms is enough proof that he has not yet been able to get
rid of covetousness for the life of a Brahma in these realms. So I will not
elaborate on this subject. But Māna may need explanation. It is of two kinds.
Avāthava and Vāthava, the first being pure conceit that rankles the soul of a
backward individual who likes to measure himself up to those superior to him
(as in the case of a sinner having the effrontery to consider himself a saint);
while the second relates to the pride of satisfaction of one who considers
himself as equal to others of his own kind (as in the case of a man of religion
who likes to think himself as pious as any other fellow devotees.) Both kinds
of conceit go under the category of Asmi māna which I have explained
before. This Māna relishes the idea: "I know. I can. I am above others."
THE EXPOSITION
This drove Ashin Khemaka to the presence of the elders so that he could
offer a personal explanation which runs as follows-
Ashin Khemaka did not consider any one of the upādānakkhandhās as asmī
in the conventional sense. This term suggests that he thought, "I know. I can.
I am great." This is self-conceit which grows out of the accomplishment of
virtue that he had truly achieved. Consider the fragrance of a water-lily.
Does it originate from its stem? From its petals? From its anothers? One can
say only conventionally that it emanates from the lily, but one cannot find
any rūpa matter that produces fragrance. The notion of asmī is there; but I
cannot say, "This is I".
Ashin Khemaka then continued, "An Ariya (the Noble One) destroys the
bonds of individuality, doubts, false religious practices, lust and animosity.
But at this stage he cannot break away from asmī māna, asmī chanda and
anusaya māna. They are subtle kinds of attachment to self, desire for self
and inclination toward self. If, however the Ariyan disciple notes with
mindfulness the arising and passing away of the five aggregates of clinging,
such subtle passions will subside.
"Consider this metaphor of a washerwoman. She washes clothes with soap
and water and they become clean-white. Still they smell of soap. Only when
they are kept in a scented box they lose their odour. If one continually
meditates on the five aggregates of clinging, all these subtle passions will be
washed away clean and one can remain without any vestiges of such
passions.
When his goal has been achieved, an Arahat looks back in retrospect to
examine within himself about his attainments. This is an exercise in
reflective knowledge. As he reflects, he is aware of the cessation of
upādānakkhandhās and saṅkhāras. Reflection on these two states is
reflection on the Path and its Fruition on the one hand and Nibbāna on the
other. He also reflects on the total and final termination of his rebirths in the
following manner.
It is also a reflection on Kilesās that have been totally uprooted. I would like
to recall you to mind that fishermen who, discovering that he had grappled a
poisonous snake in his hand instead of a fish, flung it away, and yet looked
back as he ran away from it. Here reflection on cessation as it takes place is
reflection on Fruition, and that on Saṅkhāra is reflection on Nibbāna.
Reflection on the Path, its Fruition Nibbāna and uprooted Kilesās constitutes
four Paccavekkhaṇās (self-examination) for an Arahat. Since no Kilesās can
reside in him it would appear that it is superfluous for him to reflect on those
that remain unextinguished. But it is imperative for the three lower stages of
Anāgāmi, Sakadāgāmi and Sotāpanna to look within themselves the
presence of Kilesās that might have been lurking in him in case they have
not been discarded. There are five Paccavekkhaṇās for each of these Ariyas.
Now there are 15 for them which may be added to the four for the Arahat,
making a total of 19. At this final stage all these 19 categories of self-
appraisal are also carried out, so says the Commentaries.
I am going into all these details just for your information. For a layman to
become an Arahat is not easy. In fact it was never easy in the time of the
Buddha, there being only a few cases of such an instance as in the cases of
King Suddhodana and Minister Santati.
In the realm of this Sāsanā, Reverend Sir, there are bhikkhus who, having
declared themselves to be free from all āsavas, gain possession of ten
kinds of strength.
It means that the strength of an Arahat lies in his firm conviction in the
impermanency of Rūpa, matter, Nāma, mind and Saṅkhāra mental
formations or volitional activity. Besides an Arahat no other Ariyas gain this
knowledge perfectly and well. It is conceded that even ordinary worldlings
can realize this knowledge if they meditate strongly to cultivate
Bhaṅgañāṇa; but with them this knowledge will be only transitory, lasting for
the moment of its revelation. As soon as they forget to resume meditation
after the blooming of the knowledge, their conviction in the law of Anicca
sags. With a Sotāpanna it is different. He is described in Visuddhi Magga as
one who has discarded the three deviational tendencies Saññāvipallāsa,
inconsistency in perception; Cittavipallāsa, inconsistency in mind and
Diṭṭhivipallāsa, inconsistency in views. From this it can be adduced that he is
incapable of deflecting from the view of Anicca. Even then, however, he is
not free from Asmi māṇa, conceit derived from the view of the existence of
'I'. It is because of this that once Buddha had the occasion to chasten Ashin
Meghika.
In order to uproot conceit which asserts, "I am. I know," one should cultivate
the practice of reflecting on impermanency, Meghika! One who recollects
Anicca all the time becomes established in the knowledge that all is not self.
Once this idea of unsubstantiality gets firmly rooted, Asmi māna will be
eradicated, and Nibbāna, where all sufferings cease, will be drawn nearer to
one in one's present existence.
In fact, Māna is unstable, uppish now and debased the next moment. It
dominates in one who thinks that all things are permanent and eternal. But it
meets its fall when that one realizes that one day one will have to face death
unable to retain immortality. So when one meditates on Anicca one can
never be possessed by this Māna. Commentaries say that once Anicca is
appreciated, Dukkha and Anatta will also be realized. If one recognizes only
one characteristic of the three marks one may be deemed to have known all.
Reverend Sir! When a Bhikkhu in whom āsavas have been rendered extinct
realizes truly and well through the exercise of Vipassanā wisdom that all the
five constituents of sensual pleasures are verily like live coals, he may be
regarded as possessing the strength of an Arahat and he may duly proclaim
himself to be so.
The five constituents of sensual pleasures are generated by visible objects,
sound objects, smell objects, taste objects and tangible objects. These
varieties of objects relate to men and women, sights and sounds, foods,
dress, bed and home, beasts of burden and vehicles and gold, silver and
precious stones. They all give rise to kilesās that burn like fire. The flames of
greed, anxiety and envy cause untold miseries, leading one to woeful
existences, or throwing one into the whirlpool of saṃsarā, rounds of
suffering. The trouble starts the moment a man falls in love with a woman.
He goes at great length to be near her and finally to possess her. The story
does not end there. When he possesses her he becomes worried lest he
loses her to his rivals. He also acquires wealth by all means, fair or foul, and
when he has accumulated it, he becomes troubled by anxiety and fear lest
he should lose it. Here if he gets what he wants through vice and
lawlessness, he shall go down to the nether worlds in recompense.
Those who have a predilection for the five constituent or formless realms
where they cannot expect them. In the formless realm nāma, mind, alone is
extant. Arūpa denotes the presence of both citta, consciousness and
cetasika, mental properties. Rūpa, matter, however, is totally absent there.
Those hankering after the pleasures of the senses will therefore be unable to
enjoy seeing, hearing, smelling, tasting, and touching. Brahmās thrive in
thinking and ideation which do not meet their demands of pleasure-seekers.
In the realm of forms there may be vestiges of sense-organs like eyes, ears,
etc., but their pasādas, sensitive qualities, are missing. So the Brahmās in
that realm are denied the enjoyment of sights, sounds, smell and taste and
touch. They are also sexless. So pleasure-seekers have no desire to go to the
world of Brahmās in that realm of forms also. They prefer not to practise
wholesome actions that can result in jhāna. They take pleasure only in the
quality of the senses. Their kamma result will be that they can sojourn only
in the world of senses to suffer old age, disease and death time and again.
For them Nibbāna is the least to be desired. So they have no mind to
practise insight-meditation. The result is that they cannot get liberated from
the rounds of suffering. After all, these five constituents of sensual pleasure
are verily like live coals or burning fire-wood. Anyone who proclaims himself
to be freed of all āsavas should examine himself whether he has succeeded
in getting rid of all the five kāmaguṇnas.
In 700 Buddhist Era there reigned in Sinhala, the present Srī Lankā, a king by
the name of Vasabha, who put a so-called Arahat to an acid test. Inviting the
pretender to an offering, he took a very delicious drink of plum cordial
himself. This made the monk's mouth water. Then he let it be known that the
so-called Arahat was no Arahat at all. "A true Arahat," says the commentary,
"who has eradicated all āsavas in him, does not develop rasā-taṇhā,
attachment to taste. He takes no enjoyment even in such delicious tastes
that can be met with in the world of devas.
Again, Reverend Sir, there is the Bhikkhu who, having extinguished āsavas
in him, inclines to, abides in and enjoys the seclusion of Nibbāna, the end of
suffering, happy in his renunciation of the sensual world, remaining entirely
aloof from all kilesās that accompany āsavas. This inclination towards the
seclusion of Nibbāna is also the strength of a Bhikkhu freed of all āsavas,
and he may duly proclaim himself to be so freed.
Very few, however, can bend their minds on Nibbāna where rūpa, nāma and
saṅkhāra are all absent. Most are not responsive to the idea of extinction of
mind and matter. So there is a kind of wishful thinking among them that
Buddhas and Arahats who have entered Parinibbāna reside in Nibbāna with
their special elements of nāma and rūpa. True Arahats, however, exclude
all substrata of existence from Nibbāna. They have no desire for a life
accompanied by its accessories of nāma and rūpa.
An Arahat desires neither death nor life. He is biding his time for his
Parinibbāna just as a daily wage-earner bides his time for his wages due to
him.
And again, Reverend Sir, there is the Bhikkhu who, having extinguished
āsavas, cultivates the four Satipaṭṭhānas and cultivates them well. This
cultivation of mind-culture is also the strength of an Arahat in whom all
āsavas have become extinct. He may therefore proclaim himself as having
extinguished all āsavas in him.
Bhikkhus! Monks who have been just ordained are just freshmen to my
domain of Dhammavinaya (the Law and the Discipline). It is but meet, O
Bhikkhus, that you, the elders and seniors guide them to the practice of the
cultivation of the four categories of mindfulness, set them up there, instill in
them the habit (of meditating) and let them stand firm on it.
Just as now, in those days when Buddha was living, new converts had to be
ordained. They accepted the teaching out of their own conviction. Buddha
foresaw the need for proffering good advice to them so that they realized the
dhamma; and that advice was for them to practise Satipaṭṭhāna. In those
days I think we should be concerned not only with the newly-converted but
also with new monks who were born Buddhists. Such newly-ordained monks
are innocent, with morality undefiled. They are strong in their faith and full of
enthusiasm. Thus they are placed in a good situation for the realization of
the dhamma, and if this realization is accomplished their morality will
become unassailed and pure throughout their career as monks. Even if that
ideal is not achievable, it is definite that it will teach them self-control.
Come, new friends! To enable yourself to know the nature of your physical
body truly and well, practise mindfulness on your own body.
Then, having zealously exerted yourself to that end, you stand established in
right understanding in concentration on one sense-object, in perspicuity, in
steadfastness and in one-pointedness of mind.
If you start practising with noting the postures, note the lifting, the stretching
and the putting down of the leg as you walk. Keep your mind on each
phenomenon. When standing, concentrate your mind on standing, and when
sitting do it likewise with sitting. If you practise mindfulness on the rise and
fall of your belly or chest, keep your mind on each of the phenomena, noting
that your belly or chest is rising or falling. You will achieve clarity of mind.
You will find that the noting mind and the noted object remain steadfast
together in couples.
It is in this manner cited that Buddha exhorted young and newly ordained
monks to practise Satipaṭṭhāna, especially one of its constituents,
Kāyānupassanā, mindfulness of the physical body. Since there are many
methods in Satipaṭṭhāna, he can take up any one that suits him and practise;
but he should not remain an imbecile. If one who does not practise the
Dhamma and is brazen enough to pass strictures on those who do, one may
be held to be accumulating unwholesome actions and defying Buddha.
THREEFOLD VEDANĀS
Vedanā, feeling, is threefold: pain, pleasure and indifference. When you feel
tired and uncomfortable you should note these phenomena with mindfulness
as Dukkha vedanā, misery, or pain. When you feel depressed meditate on
the depression. When you feel happy and joyous, note this state of mind as
Sukha vedanā, pleasurable feeling. There is another kind of feeling which is
neither pain nor pleasure. This indifferent state of mind is called Upekkhā
vedanā, arising out of Citta, mind, and Cetasika, its concomitant, which
looks upon such wholesome or unwholesome mental activities as Lobha,
greed, Saddhā, faith and Sati, mindfulness with equanimity. This lack of
emotion is not easily palpable, but one must note it also.
CITTĀNUPASSANĀ
An example of this kind of meditation is also given there. It says, "when the
mind arises together with rāga, lust, know that it arises with rāga."
I am saying this on the authority of the Abhidhammā. But when we put the
theory of meditation to actual practice, we cannot be occupying ourselves all
the time with analyzing the mind into its properties, We simply take note of
greed as it arises! and as soon as we recognize it, it subsides, leaving only
the wholesome actions of knowing and noting it. Such actions belong to
vītarāga citta, dispassion, which also must be noted by the meditator. This
method of observation or Vipassanā can be applied to the uprising of anger,
doubt and other similar emotions. But it is not easy to watch the mind, in this
case, consciousness, and gain insight. Observing rūpa may not raise any
problem, for it is capable of making impressions on the meditator's mind. So
we recommend the noting of the rise and fall of the belly. You may feel
asserting itself as you are meditating on the rise and fall of your belly. Then
note the greed. As soon as you are aware of its uprising it will subside. If you
can do this repeat doing it two or three times or more till it finally
disappears.
I am talking about mind and its ideation which you should note. But there are
many physical activities, besides mental, for instance, tiredness, discomfort
due to oppressive heat and the like. When you note them, your mind may
have the occasion to hop from one sense-object to another. Then the
question arises whether that does not amount to mind-wandering. Those
who are not acquainted with the nature of samādhi in Vipassanā may take
it for distraction. But insight-knowledge does not mean the mind dwelling
only on one dhamma. "Sabbam parinneyyam", says the scripture, and it
means all the dhammas or activities must be observed. A meditating yogī
must, therefore, practise in such a way that he makes himself aware of all
that happen at the six sense-doors. Samādhi must be established on the
sense-object that appears, now here, now there, for the duration of that
appearance. The mind following the sense-object may not be taken as
disruption of samādhi, which adheres to the object noted every time that
object becomes noticeable. Concentration establishes itself on the object
irrespective of the latter's changeability. And it is because of this nature that
one can gain knowledge about anicca, impermanence, in the exercise of
samādhi.
DHAMMĀNUPASSANĀ
Sekkhas are those who are undergoing training in the dhamma. They are
also required to practise Satipaṭṭāna.
To know the true nature of the physical body (as being subject to anicca)
meditate on it and abide in the knowledge.
This does not abrogate asekkhas who have been trained and rewarded with
Arahatship from practising mindfulness.
In Sāla sutta Buddha points out that newly-ordained monks Ariyas under
training in the Law and Arahats practise the four Satipaṭṭānas. In this
Sīlavanta Sutta it has been proposed that worldlings as well as Sotāpannas.
Sakadāgāmis, Anāgāmis and Arahats should meditate on
Upādānakkhandhās, the aggregates of clinging. Both Suttas are in
agreement on this subject. The practice of Satipaṭṭāna or mindfulness aims
at Sammā sati, right mindfulness, with the Eightfold Noble Path as its
objective. Meditation on the aggregates of clinging also leads one to the
Noble Path. So, Satipaṭṭāna and meditation on Upādānakkhandhās are
synonymous, one complementing the other. The objectives of the four
Satipaṭṭānas are Kāya, Vedanā, Citta and Dhamma. They constitute
Upādānakkhandhās. Kāya denotes clinging to matter, Vedanā to feeling,
Citta to consciousness and Dhamma to perception, mental formations and
others relating to the phenomenon of clinging. The meditating yogī must
therefore bear in mind that meditating on Upādānakkhandhās and practising
Satipaṭṭāna are the only two methods by which he can aspire to Nibbāna.
To sum up, I would like to emphasize the point that an Arahat also meditates
on the five aggregates of clinging like Anāgāmis, Sakadāgāmis and
Sotāpannas.
May this audience be happy in mind and sound in body, able to meditate in
the five aggregates of clinging, being mindful in Kāya, Vedanā, Citta and
Dhamma so that they can aspire to Nibbāna after the realization of the Path
and its Fruition.
PART VIII
(Delivered on the 8th. Waxing and the Full Moon of Thadingyut, 1329 M.E.)
An Arahat, as you might have known, also meditates, like all other Ariyas,
Noble Ones, on the five aggregates of clinging. Now what benefits can
accrue to an accomplished man of sanctity from meditation.? Can he hope to
become a Pacceka-buddha, non-preaching Buddha, or a Sammāsambuddha,
Supreme Buddha? According to Theravāda Arahatship is the highest state of
holiness. He has exterminated a all depravities of the mind called Āsavas
and is due for Nibbāna, the end of suffering. Indeed he has done all there is
to be done, leaving nothing undone. An aspirant to the state of
Paccekabuddha has to pray for it before a Supreme Buddha whom he
happens to encounter in any one of his existences. But at times it may so
happen that he is born into a Suñña kappa, world of nothing, where no
Buddhas appear. In such an exceptional case, he may perfect himself to
become a Puccekabuddha by his own inherent efforts. To become a
Sammāsambuddha, however, is extremely difficult and arduous. Myriads of
Suñña kappas usually precede the rise of Buddha-worlds. In Sārakappa only
one Buddha appears, in Mandakappa, two Buddhas, in Varakappa three
Buddhas, in Saramandakappā four Buddhas and in Bhaddakappa (which is
our world) five Buddhas, namely, Kakusandha, Konāgamaṇa, Kassapa
(Buddhas of the past), Gotama (Buddha of this era) and Arimetteyya
(Buddha of the future). Millions and millions of Kappās pass by without any
Buddha appearing, and once in a long, long while, one or two or three or four
or five may appear. Sammāsambuddhas of whom Gotama Buddha is one,
attain enlightenment, out of their own exertions in the discovery of the Four
Noble Truths without the guidance of any mentor. Buddhās,
Paccekabuddhas and Arahat--all enter Parinibbāna in the same manner.
Sāriputtarā said:
ACHIEVEMENT OF HAPPINESS
There are many instances cited in the scriptures of Vipassanā healing pain
and disease. Mahākassapa Thera recovered from his illness as he listened
attentively to Buddha preaching bojjhaṅgas, supreme knowledge leading to
enlightenment. Buddha himself averted death by an intensive practice of
Vipassanā as he became afflicted with a very serious ailment while he was
spending his last vassa in the village of Veluva.
CONSTANT MINDFULNESS
Now to continue with the subject of the strength of an Arahat, this is what
Sāriputtarā further said.
And again, Reverend Sir, the other strength of a Bhikkhu who has
extinguished all āsavas in him is the accomplishment in the four
sammappadānas; and once these four have been fully and well
accomplished, he can proclaim himself to be freed of all āsavas.
Even in mundane affairs possession of one' if not all, of these four Iddhis can
contribute to the attainment of perfection. In big undertakings we need a
particularly strong Iddhi. To achieve merit out of practising charity or
morality an ordinary Iddhi may be enough; but when it comes to developing
wholesome actions through the practice of Samatha, mindfulness and
Vipassanā, concentration, either Chandiddhipāda or Viriyiddhipāda or
Cittiddhipāda or Vimamsiddhipāda must be extraordinarily strong. Arahats
take up concentration or meditation with these four Iddhipādas.
I would like to ask the yogīs to try to excel themselves in at least one of the
Iddhis. That is to say that they must try to possess either the will or the effort
or the aptitude or the knowledge in seeking the light of the dhamma.
And again, Reverend Sir, another strength of an Arahat who has rendered all
Āsavas in him extinct, is the development of the five Indriyas truly and well.
Having developed this strength of the five Indriyas, he can proclaim himself
as having been freed of all Āsavas.
For the purpose, however, of defining the strengths of an Arahat we take the
five Indriyas of faith, energy, mindfulness, concentration and wisdom,
namely, Saddhindriyā, Virindriya, Satindriya, Samādindriya and
Paññindriya.
When we say faith, of course we mean the right faith. It has nothing to do
with beliefs in the wrong teachings of heretics which are classified as
Micchāadhimokkha, wrong views. To know the true Teacher, his true
Teachings and his true Order, you must know the nine virtues of the Buddha,
the six virtues of the Dhamma and the nine virtues of the Sangha. There are
nine Lokuttarā dhammas, transcendental conditions which are the four Ariya
maggas, Noble Paths, the four Ariya phalas, Noble Fruits and Nibbāna. All
Desanās or teachings relate to these true dhammas; and all that have
nothing to do with them are false.
Belief in the three gems and in kamma and the result of kamma is belief in
the true faith, which is saddhindriya. Casual reflection on the virtues of the
Buddha does not amount to the establishment of firmness in this indriya. It
is only when one practises insight-meditation leading to the path of a
Sotāpanna that one's faith becomes firmly rooted. Vipassanā reveals the true
nature of rūpa and nāma, the one as the cause and the other as the effect,
always arising and passing away, never being permanent, always producing
suffering or unsatisfactoriness and creating nothing but unsubstantiality.
When the knowledge of the Path of a Sotāpanna is achieved one is fully
prepared for Nibbāna. At this stage saddhindriya remains as firm as a rock.
About satindriya, factor governing mindfulness, what has been said about
Satipaṭṭāna applies.
Bala itself is strength, and it is the same as the five indriyas that I have
spoken of. A Bhikkhu endowed with saddhābala firmly believes in the three
gems - - Buddha, Dhamma and Sangha -- and his faith in them remains
adamant like a rock which can withstand the buffeting of the storm of doubt.
A Bhikkhu who possesses vīriya bala is not troubled by sloth and torpor. He
exerts himself to achieve the factors of enlightenment. If he is accomplished
in sati bala, he shall forever be mindful of the phenomenal world around him
noting it as he sees, hears or touches sense-objects. Nothing passes him
unnoticed. If he is established in samādhibala, his mind will never get
scattered and he can concentrate on his objective. The establishment of
samādhi becomes substantial when he reaches the stage of
saṅkhārupekkhā ñāṇa. A yogī who abides in samādhi can meditate for
several hours without being aware of the sense of time.
A Bhikkhu endowed with paññābala can dispense with delusion which takes
in all conditioned things as permanent. When it is at work it hoodwinks one
into believing that what one sees or hears is everlasting. Be he a worldling, a
man possessed with udayabbaya ñāṇa, bhaṅga ñāṇa and saṅkhārupekkhā
ñāṇa knows the realities of the phenomenal world by dint of his paññābala.
An Ariya stands firm in this knowledge about impermanency. Well-
accomplished in the strength of the knowledge, an Arahat remains unruffled
by the onslaught of any delusion which hides the truth about anicca, dukkha
and anatta.
SATI SAMBOJJHAÑGA
DHAMMAVICAYA SAMBOJJHAÑGA
As you see or hear, you just note the sights and sounds as sights and
sounds which, by their nature, arise and pass away, never being permanent.
A yogī in meditation recollects clearly this constant flux of Nāmarūpa. In
fact he can more clearly recollect the constant state of flux when he is
concentrating his mind on ear-objects. Some of the yogīs of this meditation
centre told me that they could discriminate the sounds that they heard by
the right ear or by the left ear, their sense of hearing being so sharpened
through the practice of meditation.
VĪRIYA SAMBOJJHAÑGA
PĪTI SAMBOJJHAÑGA
PASSADDHI SAMBOJJHAÑGA
SAMĀDHI SAMBOJJHAÑGA
UPEKKHĀ SAMBOJJHAÑGA
This sambojjhaṅga relating to indifference is rather difficult of
understanding. It may be applied to feeling, wisdom, exertion and cetasikas
or mental properties. When we speak of pleasure or pain, we are referring to
feelings that we experience in everyday life. But beyond them there is a
state of mind called indifference or upekkhā vedanā. When we say wisdom,
we mean vipassanā ñāṇa and saṅkhārupekkhā ñāṇa which at once suggest
a state of evenness of the mind. When we speak of exertion, we mean vīriya
upekkhā which must be so balanced that it is neither over-worked nor under-
achieved. Besides them there are other upekkhās like chalangupekkhā
indifference to the six senses, brahmavihārupekkhā-indifference to the
abode of the Brahmās, jhānupekkhā, indifference to jhāna, and
parisuddhupekkhā, indifference to perfect purity. They are mental qualities
that come under upekkhāna-sambojjhaṅga, They also connote mind set at
equilibrium. But in the present context, one cannot be very pragmatic about
their nature since one rarely encounters them in life. It is only when a
Vipassanā yogī attains udayabbaya ñāṇa that he really experiences them
and that by intuition.
A yogī may cultivate these seven Bojjhaṅgas at any time he likes. When
Sati sambojjhaṅga is exercised all others in the category of Sambojjhaṅgas
will be brought into play.
Earlier I have pointed out that the cultivation of Bojjhaṅgas has the power to
heal. When Mahā Kassapa fell sick, Buddha made a discourse on the seven
Bojjhaṅgas thus bringing the latter to mind the factors of enlightenment on
which he was meditating. At once sickness disappeared. When Mahā
Moggalāna fell sick likewise, the same thing happened. When Buddha
himself actually fell sick, Cunda recited the seven Bojjhaṅgas and as the
Enlightened One listened to the recitation and meditated on the factors, his
sickness wore away. When he spent his last Vassa at Veluva village, he was
afflicted with an ailment that would have ended his life then and there. But
he exercised Vipassanā, and he arose from his sickness. This Vipassanā is no
other than meditation on the seven Bojjhaṅgas.
May you who have listened to this discourse with respectful attention be able
to contemplate the impermanency of the five aggregates of clinging and
develop the factors of enlightenment through the accomplishment of the
Bodhipakkhiya dhammas that lead to the Path and its Fruition and bring
Nibbāna into view.
PART IX
(Delivered on the 14th. Waning of Thadingyut and the Full Moon day
of Tazaungmon, 1329 M.E.)
Right speech, right action and right livelihood come naturally at the moment
of taking up meditational exercises. No unusual efforts are necessary to
realize these qualities. As conviction in the impermanent nature of
conditioned things grows, wrong speech, wrong actions and wrong livelihood
are abandoned.
Now right view is established, all maggas have been fulfilled. As insight-
meditation gains strength, ariya magga, in the form of sotāpanna magga,
arises and it subsequently fructifies.
KHEMAKA SUTTA
Once Khemaka and Sumana were respectfully waiting upon Buddha residing
at Jetavana monastery at Sāvatthi. Khemaka then addressed himself to
Buddha thus:
Having said this Khemaka left. Then Sumana addressed himself to Buddha,
almost in the same strain, as follows.
Sona was a rich man's son brought up in the lap of luxury and ease. He was
so pampered by his parents that he never walked the earth literally
speaking, with the result that his soles became soft and hairy. When,
however, he had the opportunity to listen to Buddha's sermons, he made the
determination to practise the dhammas, not even as a lay man but as a
monk. So he turned recluse and took up Vipassanā by meditating on his act
of walking along foot-path in a grave-yard. Although he tried hard with his
meditational exercise until the ground on which he walked became
bespattered with the blood that trickled from his tender soles, he failed to
get illumined. In desperation, therefore, he thought to himself: "Those
making the greatest endeavour might be doing the same thing that I am now
doing and could not have done better. And yet I cannot get rid of this
cankerous Āsava from my mind. I have amassed a great deal of wealth at
home. It behooves me to turn a lay man and do meritorious deeds as a lay
man."
Knowing what was in Sona's mind, Buddha appeared before him and gave
him the advice that in the practice of the dhamma one should never go to
the extreme of either being too zealous or too slack, taking the lesson from a
harp-player who produced raucous notes when he played with taut or loose
strings. Sona, therefore, relaxed keeping his exertion on an even keel with
his task of concentration. His attempts proved successful. So he addressed
Buddha thus:
Reverend Sir! An Arahat who has rendered all Āsavas in him extinct,
dwells his mind solely on the emancipation of human passions, on the
establishment of solitude, on the negation of clinging, on the abandonment
of craving and on the expulsion of delusion. Even so arguments are put
forward that the Arahat's inclination for a passionless state is prompted by
his faith only. But in fact it is not faith alone that drives him to be beatified in
that state, but his abandonment of lust, anger and delusion, for he, as an
Arahat, accomplished all there is to be accomplished leaving nothing
undone. Again it may also be argued that he inclines to solitude just for the
reputation that stands him in good stead for the acquisition of material
gains. That also is not so for, as an Arahat, he has accomplished all there is
to be accomplished in discarding lust, anger and delusion. Again, it may also
be put forward that he becomes tolerant and meek because false religious
practices require him to be so. That also is not true for he, as an Arahat, has
accomplished all there is to be accomplished in conquering passions like lust,
anger and delusion.
Removed from Kilesās an Arahat refuses to fall in with the objects that he
sees whether they are pleasant or otherwise. He is for ever conscious of the
state of the dissolution of the subject that sees and the object that is seen.
This statement applies to all other phenomena of hearing, smelling, tasting
and touching. An Arahat's mind is unruffled by these phenomena. Awareness
of the dissolution of the sense-object along with the mind that takes note of
it is within the experience of our yogīs.
Some spoke in several Gāthās (stanzas) in like manner; but I shall deal with
the last two of them.
vātana nasamirati.
vayañcassānupassati.
Foul winds buffet the solid rock from all directions; and yet, it remains
unshaken. In like manner all sense-objects of seeing, hearing, smelling,
tasting and touching, whether pleasurable or not, assault the mind of an
Arahat, who, however, remains unmoved and adamantine, freed of all
kilesās, defilements, conscious only of the picture of the dissolution of the
khandhās.
This is how Sona made known his Arahatship by just throwing a hint.
SĀRIPUTTARĀ'S AVOWAL
Once a monk known by the name of Kalāya khatthiya told Sāriputtarā that
Moliyaphagguna had left the Order to become a lay man. This drew
comment from the latter who observed, "Moliyaphagguna has failed to get a
comfortable foothold in this Sāsanā." At this Kalāyana khatthiya asked the
elder thera in derision, "Am I then to take it that in your case you have got a
comfortable foothold?"
"But then," said the taunting monk, "Can you have your foothold in the
future?"
Here 'foothold' denotes the firm stand established on the foundations of the
three lower Paths and their Fruition. If the monk in question had realized
them, he would have been an Anāgāmi and would not have left the Order.
Kalāyakhatthiya again asked, "Have you extricated yourself from the hold of
a new rebirth in the future?" This is an oblique way of asking if Sāriputtarā
had become an Arahat.
Sāriputtarā replied that he had simply told the younger monk that he,
Sāriputtarā, accomplished all that was to be accomplished in relation to the
denial of future rebirths and that he had told him nothing about the Fruition
of the arahatta magga.
"Sir!" said Sāriputtarā, "I am merely reasserting that I did not use those
words as reported; but I would not say that I have said nothing."
This is how, as revealed by the teachings of the original Pāḷi texts, Arahats
themselves never avow directly that they have attained Arahatship.
When the Sāsanā was at its height in Ceylon, there was an Arahat residing in
Cittala Hill with an ascetic as his disciple. Once the latter asked his mentor as
to how he could know an Ariya. "Even you, an old monk, replied the Arahat,
"may not be able to identify an Arahat although you may be serving him as
his disciple by your side. He is unknowable." The old monk failed to know the
Arahat as an Arahat in spite of this hint.
A BRIEF RESUME
Before concluding I shall make a brief resume of what I have been saying
about Sīlavanta Sutta.
Thirdly Koṭṭhika asked how a Sakadāgāmi should devote the practice of the
dhamma. Sāriputtarā's reply was the same as before pointing out the fact a
Sakadāgāmi could become an Anāgāmi by the same method.
I now close with the usual prayer that all who have listened to this discourse
with respectful attention will enter Nibbāna, the end of suffering, having
realized wisdom, by virtue of their wholesome actions, regarding the Path
and its Fruition, as a result of insight-meditation on the five aggregates of
clinging.